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View Full Version : SciNews: microchimerism leads to possible new T1 treatment


Evermont
05-05-2008, 05:52 AM
ScienceDaily (May 5, 2008) — Cutting the umbilical cord doesn’t necessarily sever the physical link between mother and child. Many cells pass back and forth between the mother and fetus during pregnancy and can be detected in the tissues and organs of both even decades later. This mixing of cells from two genetically distinct individuals is called microchimerism...

...In January, Nelson reported the first discovery that cells passed from mother to child during pregnancy can differentiate into functioning islet beta cells that produce insulin in the child. The same study also found maternal DNA in greater amounts in the blood of children and young adults with Type 1 diabetes than their healthy siblings and a control group, implying that the cells may be attempting to repair damaged tissue. There was no evidence that the mother’s cells were attacking the child’s insulin cells and no evidence that the maternal cells were targets of an immune response from the child’s immune system. The findings could lead to new approaches to treating Type 1 diabetes. For example, if maternal microchimerism results in cells that make insulin, a mother’s stem cells might be harvested and used to treat her diabetic child. Such cells would have a genetic edge over donated islet cells from a cadaver that are usually completely genetically mismatched...

...The discovery that a mother’s cells can turn up in her adult progeny and that fetal cells can occur in women who were once pregnant heralds the emergence of microchimerism as an important new theme in biology. (link (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080502134332.htm))

Mich
05-05-2008, 06:22 AM
I've been saying to anyone who would listen for the last 30+ years that it seemed I was not diabetic for several months during my first pregnancy. Some other women have experienced similar changes. At one point, lasting about two months, I took little or no insulin at all after 15 years of Type 1. Doctors said it wasn't happening, but there it was. I'm always amazed when that happens. LISTEN TO US!

I suspected the baby's little islet cells were making insulin. She was born with a low blood sugar. In my second pregnancy this happened only slightly.It was not as marked as during my first time.

I've been waiting for some development like this to surface.Yea Science!

Mich

morrisma
05-05-2008, 06:29 AM
My ex-wife had rhumatoid arthritis which almost completely disappeared during pregnancy with the respite lasting for a few months after the births of both kids. Wonder if the kids were helping mom in some way similar to what is being discussed.

Could be a hormone related thing too. Fun with science!