It's
in the Blood
(continued)
"If
we could find a way to inhibit germinal center kinase, we could
stop the development of diseases like chronic myeloid leukemia,"
says Tuscano.
The
discovery could also lead to an assay for germinal cell kinase which
would help oncol- ogists determine if their patients had a particularly
aggressive form of chronic myeloid leukemia.
Tuscano's
research in B cells has led him to an unusual collaboration with
Dr. Eric Gershwin, professor and chief of the Division of Rheumatology,
Allergy and Clinical Immunology at the UC Davis School of Medicine
and Medical Center.
Gershwin
studies autoimmune disorders such as lupus, a chronic disease that
causes inflammation of the connective tissue, and rheumatoid arthritis,
in which the body attacks its own cartilage cells, mistaking them
for foreign invaders.
"Scientists
have always thought that autoimmune disorders were mediated primarily
by T-cell lymphocytes, but I looked at the research and thought
it was probable that these diseases were caused by B-cell abnormalities,"
says Tuscano.
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