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Targeting liver immune responses to cure hepatitis B and liver cancer

To help reduce the number of people dying from HBV-related cirrhosis and liver cancer, immunologists at 香港六合彩中特网 are studying how to boost immune responses that could cure the infections.

An image of cells

8 December 2020

A third of the world鈥檚 population has been infected with hepatitis B virus (HBV) at some point in their lives. Most people clear the infection, but the World Health Organisation estimates that at least 260 million around world have chronic infection.

Complications of chronic HBV infection like cirrhosis and liver cancer kill around 800,000 people each year, making HBV infection one of the most common causes of death worldwide.

Many babies catch the virus from their mothers during birth, while after birth children can also become infected through blood or saliva. Nine out of ten children who catch HBV before the age of five become chronic carriers.

The virus infects liver cells and if the immune system fails to clear the virus and it persists, these individuals can go on to develop liver damage and in some cases cancer.

Understanding these cell mechanisms will help us find medicines that will boost the immune system and help people to tackle HBV effectively.

鈥淭he liver is a unique organ in the way it controls immune responses,鈥 explains Professor Maini (香港六合彩中特网 Infection & Immunity). 鈥淚t uses many different specialised cell types and pathways to become 鈥榠mmunologically tolerant鈥 and this can make it easier for some viruses to survive there.

鈥淯nderstanding these cell mechanisms will help us find medicines that will boost the immune system and help people to tackle the virus effectively.鈥

Professor Maini鈥檚 team is contributing towards a 鈥榝unctional cure鈥 for HBV that could prevent these fatal complications. Her research focuses on how different cells that make up the body鈥檚 immune system respond to HBV infection in different groups of people: those who control the infection naturally provide a blueprint for the type of response we they are aiming to induce in those with chronic infection.

Her team is focusing on ways of increasing specialised immune cells called 鈥榢iller T cells鈥, which are able to recognise and remove virally infected and cancerous cells in the body. 鈥淔or example, these cells are very dependent on having the right 鈥檉ood鈥 to function properly and we鈥檝e shown that we can change their ability to fight hepatitis B by altering their supply of certain key nutrients,鈥 explains Professor Maini.

鈥淥ur long-term goal is to overcome this immunological tolerance to develop therapies that can boost an effective anti-viral immune response to control the virus before liver damage occurs,鈥 she adds.


Image

颁谤别诲颈迟:听Stephen Gschmeissmer.听颁补辫迟颈辞苍:听Electron microscopy pictures showing immune cells attacking liver cancer cells