
A peek inside some leading research labs shows how scientists-turned-detectives are painstakingly decoding what causes autoimmune diseases and how to stop the immune system from attacking you instead of protecting you.
It’s a huge challenge. By the National Institutes of Health’s newest count there are about 140 autoimmune diseases affecting tens of millions of people.
Unraveling them requires patience, persistence — and sophisticated technology to even see the suspects. Researchers use laser-powered machinery and brightly colored fluorescent dyes to tell rogue cells from normal ones.
Take Type 1 diabetes, caused when cells in the pancreas that produce insulin are gradually killed off by rogue T cells. In a biomedical engineering lab at Johns Hopkins University, researchers examine mouse pancreas cells on a computer screen. Red marks the killer cells. In yellow are “peacemaker” cells that are supposed to tamp down autoimmune reactions – but they’re outnumbered.
Another type of immune cell, B cells, drive autoimmune diseases by producing antibodies that mistake healthy tissue for foreign invaders. At NIH, Dr. Iago Pinal-Fernandez studies myositis, a poorly understood group of muscle-weakening diseases. His research shows rogue antibodies don’t just damage muscles by latching onto their surface. They can sneak inside muscle cells and disrupt their normal functions in ways that help explain varying symptoms.
“When I started, nothing was known about the type of autoimmune disease we study. Now finally we’re able to tell patients, ’You have this disease and this is the mechanism of disease,” he said.
In another NIH lab, Dr. Mariana Kaplan’s team is hunting the root causes of lupus and other autoimmune diseases — what makes the immune system run amok in the first place — and why they so often strike women.
Today's drugs tamp down symptoms but don't correct the problem. Now in early-phase clinical trials are treatments that instead aim to fix dysfunctional immune pathways.
At Hopkins, scientists are working on next-generation versions, not yet ready to try in people. In one lab, they're developing nanoparticle-based treatment to dial down pancreas-killing cells in Type 1 diabetes and ramp up “peacemaker” cells.
And in another Hopkins lab, researchers are developing what they hope will become more precise treatments for rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and other antibody-driven illnesses – drugs that search out and destroy “bad” B cells.
—-
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
This is a documentary photo story curated by AP photo editors.
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
'A perfect storm': Airlines cut flights and increase airfares as jet fuel price spikes30.03.2026 - 2
Book excerpt: "Eat Your Ice Cream" by Ezekiel J. Emanuel, M.D.03.01.2026 - 3
Bronze Age "City of Seven Ravines" unearthed in central Asia after 3,500 years18.11.2025 - 4
Rights group: At least 2,500 deaths during protest crackdown in Iran13.01.2026 - 5
RFK Jr.'s handpicked vaccine panel just voted to stop recommending hepatitis B shots for all newborns. Why experts object.05.12.2025
Ähnliche Artikel
New Year's superstitions: Eating 12 grapes, avoiding laundry and other rituals that are said to bring good fortune31.12.2025
Scientists dove hundreds of feet into the ocean and found creatures no human has ever seen. Our trash beat us there19.12.2025
'Fertiliser costs mean I'm better off not planting'30.03.2026
DEA seizes 1.7 million counterfeit fentanyl pills in Colorado storage unit19.11.2025
New images reveal interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS approaching Earth08.12.2025
2 ways you can conserve the water used to make your food04.11.2025
Qatar LNG Ships U-Turn After Attempt to Pass Through Hormuz06.04.2026
This Week In Space podcast: Episode 187 — An Inspired Enterprise22.11.2025
Humpback whale stranded on Germany's Baltic coast frees itself27.03.2026
Iran executes two men who tried storming military facility during January protest crackdown05.04.2026













