b3cnewswireMarch 16, 2022
Research team ‘TDA’ to examine ‘Regulatory T Cell Dysfunction in Autoimmunity and Inflammaging’
With this project, the partners launch their eighth joint research program since 2013
A German independent research institute, BioMed X, announces today the start of its new research project ‘Regulatory T Cell Dysfunction in Autoimmunity and Inflammaging’ (TDA) in collaboration with Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany. The main objective of the research group TDA is to understand the molecular mechanisms governing immune senescence and metabolic dysfunction in regulatory T cells and other T cell subsets that are shared in autoimmunity and aging.
Group Leader of team TDA, Dr. Gorjana Rackov, explains: “Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are crucial for maintaining self-tolerance and preventing autoimmune disease. During aging, cellular senescence of Tregs and their dysfunctional state may contribute to age-related diseases fueled by chronic inflammation in the elderly – also called “inflammaging”. Our goal is to improve patient outcomes by delivering new targets and novel therapeutic approaches for autoimmune disease treatment and for balancing immune responses in the elderly”, adds Rackov, who holds a PhD in molecular biology. Before joining the BioMed X Institute in Heidelberg, Rackov worked as a postdoctoral researcher at the National Centre for Biotechnology (CNB) in Madrid, which forms part of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC).
The start of team TDA underlines the ongoing successful collaboration of the partners since the inception of the BioMed X Institute in Heidelberg, Germany, in 2013. With four research projects already successfully completed, team TDA will join the three ongoing research groups sponsored by Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany: two in oncology (RNA Splicing in Cancer, Synthetic Lethality in DNA Repair) and one in immunology (Intestinal Epithelial Barrier in Autoimmune Diseases).
Christian Tidona, Founder and Managing Director of the BioMed X Institute: “The next big frontier in immunology research is understanding human disease biology in the context of human tissue microenvironment and at the level of single cells.” And Tidona adds: “This new project allows us to further deepen our expertise in immunology research and to lay the groundwork for new therapeutic concepts for the treatment of chronic inflammation in autoimmune patients and the elderly.”
Further details about this new research project can be found on Pharmasources.
BioMed X is an independent research institute located on the campus of the University of Heidelberg in Germany, with a world-wide network of partner locations. Together with our partners, we identify big biomedical research challenges and provide creative solutions by combining global crowdsourcing with local incubation of the world’s brightest early-career research talents. Each of the highly diverse research teams at BioMed X has access to state-of-the-art research infrastructure and is continuously guided by experienced mentors from academia and industry. At BioMed X, we combine the best of two worlds – academia and industry – and enable breakthrough innovation by making biomedical research more efficient, more agile, and more fun.
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