Indian origin Prof gets $600000 grant to develop lupus cure

Press Trust of India  |  Houston 

An Indian-origin and his two colleagues at the University of have got a USD 600,000 private grant for their path-breaking research to develop a new The Target Identification in grant from the Research Alliance has been given to Chandra Mohan, endowed in the university's biomedical engineering department, and his research team members and is a complex that is difficult to diagnose, treat and defeat.

Only one treatment has been approved in nearly 60 years. "nephritis (kidney disease) is one of the most serious complications of With the TIL grant support, Chandra Mohan, MD, PhD, University of will build on his existing discoveries to evaluate a potential new therapeutic target for nephritis," the health organisation said. Only seven researchers across the country were asked to carry out these tasks and the grant will address fundamental questions in research, remove barriers to new treatments and possibly find a cure for and its complications, it said. is quite common among African-Americans and Hispanics here in US, and also common in Asia Mohan told "Our data suggests that measuring the levels of a molecule called ALCAM (activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule) in the urine may be useful in monitoring progression of this " He said that with the grant his team proposes to investigate if can be treated by blocking ALCAM using an antibody. "If this succeeds in animal models, the next step would be to examine if this might also be a good treatment target in patients with lupus," he said. Researchers will examine ALCAM, which is also present in and in the urine of patients with kidney patients may have increased ALCAM in both their and their kidneys, and this probably plays a major role in activating the immune system and causing the kidney in patients, said Mohan. While healthy people need ALCAM to activate their T cells to fight off foreign microbes in the body, in patients with an autoimmune disease, the activated T cells end up just fighting the patients own tissues, rather than a foreign body. Mohan will continue tracking ALCAM to confirm its presence in the kidneys of patients rather than just the urine, while also investigating whether the increased ALCALM is indeed driving the His research will also include treating by testing an antibody that blocks ALCAM. If the antibody does block lupus, then he could move onto translational studies and clinical trials, said Mohan, alluding to possible new for the We began this study looking for biomarkers and we think ALCAM is a good biomarker, meaning we may be able to track the by looking at the levels of ALCAM in the urine. But now we are finding that ALCAM may be a therapeutic target, too, Mohan said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, February 23 2018. 15:15 IST
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