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+ | ====== Press release – " | ||
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+ | **April 27, 2009** – Autoimmune diseases have long been regarded as illnesses in which the immune system creates autoantibodies to attack the body itself. | ||
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+ | Not long ago, scientists believed they had located all bacteria capable of causing human disease, | ||
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+ | In a paper published in // | ||
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+ | "When analyzing a genetic pathway, we must study how bacterial and human genes interact, in order to fully understand any process related to the human superorganism," | ||
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+ | For example, the team notes that the single gene ACE has an impact on myocardial infarction, renal tubular dysgenesis, Alzheimer' | ||
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+ | "No one would argue that these species aren’t present in the human body, yet there has been inadequate study of how these ' | ||
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+ | "What we thought were autoantibodies generated against the body itself can now be understood as antibodies directed against the hidden bacteria," | ||
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+ | To validate their lab discoveries, | ||
+ | * Transcript: https:// | ||
+ | * Video: https:// | ||
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+ | ===== Resources ===== | ||
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+ | * Citation: Proal AD et al. In press. // | ||
+ | * Full-text preprint: https:// | ||
+ | * DOI: https:// | ||
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+ | {{tag> | ||
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+ | < | ||
+ | ===== Notes and comments ===== | ||
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+ | </ | ||