FEVER'S ORIGIN DISCOVERED BY RESEARCHERS
Fever is a response to
inflammation, and is triggered by an onset of the signaling substance
prostaglandin. Researchers at Linköping University in Sweden can now see precisely
where these substances are produced -- a discovery that paves the way for
smarter drugs.
When you take an
aspirin, all production of prostaglandins in the body is suppressed. All
symptoms of inflammation are eased simultaneously, including fever, pain and
loss of appetite. But it might not always be desirable to get rid of all
symptoms -- there is a reason why they appear.
"Perhaps you want
to inhibit loss of appetite but retain fever. In the case of serious
infections, fever can be a good thing," says David Engblom, senior
lecturer in neurobiology at Linköping University.
Eleven years ago he
had his first breakthrough as a researcher when he uncovered the mechanism
behind the formation of prostaglandin E2 during fever. These signaling
molecules cannot pass the blood-brain barrier, the purpose of which is to
protect the brain from hazardous substances. Engblom showed that instead, they
could be synthesised from two enzymes in the blood vessels on the inside of the
brain, before moving to the hypothalamus, where the body's thermostat is
located.
Previous work from the
research team described a very simple mechanism, but there was not yet proof
that it was important in real life. The study to be published in TheJournal
of Neuroscience with David Engblom and his doctoral student Daniel
Wilhelms as lead authors is based on tests with mice that lack the enzymes
COX-2 and mPGES-1 in the brain's blood vessels. When they were infected with
bacterial toxins the fever did not appear, while other signs of inflammation
were not affected.
"This shows that
those prostaglandins which cause fever are formed in the blood-brain barrier --
nowhere else. Now it will be interesting to investigate the other inflammation
symptoms. Knowledge of this type can be useful when developing drugs that ease
certain symptoms, but not all of them," explains David Engblom.
For many years there
has been debate as to where the fever signaling originates. Three alternative
ideas have been proposed. Firstly, that it comes from prostaglandins
circulating in the blood, secondly that it comes from immune cells in the
brain, and thirdly Engblom's theory, which stresses the importance of the
brain's blood vessels. The third proposal can now be considered confirmed.
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