Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source

With inflammation, it's better to have a cool head

An abnormal immune system can mistake body tissue for a foreign invader and attack it, causing inflammation. Researchers are learning how similar dynamics occur in the brain. Agricultural Research Service scientists have found that blueberry extracts helped quell the inflammation that was produced when the brain's immune cells responded to oxidative stress, based on a cell-culture study.

Lead author, molecular biologist Francis Lau, and neuroscientist James Joseph conducted the study at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University in Boston, Mass. Joseph leads the HNRCA's Neuroscience Laboratory. ARS is USDA's chief scientific research agency. The study was published in the Journal of Neuroscience Research.

Inflammation is thought to be stoked by the overactivation of the brain's immune cells, called microglia. While seeking to protect and repair injured brain tissue, microglia produce and send out chemical stress signals--some of which are called cytokines--to other cells. Those signals begin a cascade of reactions, including the activation of genes that express proteins and other stress chemicals to help clear away cellular debris.

Microglia can become chronically overactivated, for example, in response to accumulation of brain plaques, which in turn is thought to trigger inflammation.

Lau used a rodent microglial cell line as a model to study toxin-induced microglial activation. He exposed groups of those test cells to various levels of blueberry extracts. He then challenged the cells with oxidative stress by exposing them to the toxin that triggers the secretion of inflammatory chemicals.

Neuroinflammation has been linked to the expression of genes that spew, among others, two inflammatory enzymes, iNOS and COX-2, and two cytokines, IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha. Lau used a detection method to find and measure the expression of genes that produced iNOS and COX-2 in the stress-induced cell cultures. He found that the blueberry treatment significantly reduced that expression.

The blueberry extract also markedly lessened secretion of the two inflammatory cytokines.

Read more about this research in the August issue of Agricultural Research magazine, available online at: http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/aug07/aging0807.htm.

10/29/07
None\12-A

Date: 10/19/07


Comments on Articles
With inflammation, it's better to have a cool head
Add Your Comment

New:
You can now post a comment without the need of registering. Enter your name and email. Your email will not be displayed. All comments are monitored and will be removed if considered inappropriate.

29 Recommend | 0 Comments

Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source
Google
 
Web hpj.com
Copyright/Privacy
Copyright 1995-2008.  High Plains Publishers, Inc.  All rights reserved.  Any republishing of these pages, including electronic reproduction of the editorial archives or classified advertising, is strictly prohibited. If you have questions or comments you can reach us at
High Plains Journal 1500 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., P.O. Box 760, Dodge City, KS 67801 or call 1-800-452-7171. Email: webmaster@hpj.com
Ally from DuPont    
EquipmentForTheFarm
New or used farm equipment
Latest Ag News High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  •  BSE Timeline
  • View From the Cab
  • Kub's Den
  • By the Numbers: Dornfeld
  • Export Inspections Mixed
  • Crop Beat
  • Summer Weather Outlook -- 4
  • Hunger Group Calls for Grain Reserve
  • Groups Want Tariff Dropped
    ©2008 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  • DTN Early Word Grains 07/09 06:03
  • DTN Midday Grain Comments 07/08 12:23
  • DTN Closing Grain Comments 07/08 14:25
  • DTN Cattle Close/Trends 07/07 15:25
  • DTN Early Word Opening Livestock 07/09 05:38
  • DTN Midday Livestock Comments 07/08 12:19
  • DTN Closing Livestock Comments 07/08 18:09
  • DTN Chart Technical Points 07/08 15:00
  • DTN Feeder Pig Index
    ©2008 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    National Ag News Agriculture Industry Today

    Farm and ranch survey.

    High Plains Journal agriculture news RSS Feed
     

    Add agriculture and ranching news RSS XML feed to My Yahoo!
    Add agriculture and livestock RSS XML news feed to Google