Autoimmune diseases: Protein discovered as potential new target for therapies

Autoimmune diseases are complex conditions whose causes are diverse and have not been fully elucidated to date. A research team at MedUni Vienna has now discovered an immunoregulatory protein that could be linked to the development of autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. -Rinl- is the name of the identified building block of the immune system, which may provide a new starting point for the development of immunomodulatory therapies. The study results were recently published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. In the course of their research, the team led by Nicole Boucheron and Ruth Herbst (Center for Pathophysiology, Infectiology and Immunology at MedUni Vienna) found particularly high levels of Rinl in special immune cells, the T cells. Rinl, like its siblings Rin 1-3, is a member of the family of Ras-interacting proteins (Rin) and is a comparatively young object of research. While a deficiency or excess of Rin 1-3 proteins has already been linked in recent years in international studies, for example, to cancer, Alzheimer's disease or the spinal disease scoliosis, Rinl has so far been little researched.
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