The researchers at University of Queensland (UQ) in Australia have uncovered how an inflammation process automatically switches off in healthy cells, and are now investigating ways to stop it manually when it goes awry.
"Now that we understand how this pathway naturally turns off in health, we can investigate why it does not turn off in disease - so it is very exciting," said UQ Associate Professor Kate Schroder.
She focused on inflammasomes, which are machine-like protein complexes at the heart of inflammation and disease.
"If the disturbance can not be cleared, such as in the case of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's, these molecular machines continue to fire, resulting in neurodegenerative damage from the sustained inflammation," she said.
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The team, led by Dave Boucher, discovered that inflammasomes normally work with an in-built timer switch, to ensure they only fire for a specific length of time once triggered.
"The inflammasome initiates the inflammation process by activating a protein that functions like a pair of scissors, and cuts itself and other proteins," Schroder said.
Schroders laboratory has begun studying the inflammasome in fatty liver disease, a rapidly growing health issue due to the increasing global incidence of obesity and diabetes.
Compounds to block inflammasome have been developed by researchers including Schroder, and are being commercialised by start-up drug development company Inflazome Ltd, researchers said.