Understanding Immune Imbalances
Last year, Dr. Khor received a National Institutes of Health grant for this study. The grant helped him start building one of the nation’s first biorepositories of blood and tissue samples from people with DS.
Dr. Khor’s team will use these samples to analyze immune cells from patients with DS and patients with both DS and autoimmune disease. The researchers will compare their findings to samples from the patients’ healthy family members.
“This helps us understand what healthy immune systems look like and identify what’s different in patients with DS,” Dr. Khor says. “It also gives us clues about what makes people with DS more susceptible to autoimmune disease.”
Pursuing Treatments
Dr. Khor hopes this research leads to better therapies for autoimmune diseases or even ways to prevent them. He already has an idea for how to do this.
In a previous study, Dr. Khor found that blocking a gene called DYRK1A significantly reduces the activity of white blood cells – leading him to believe the gene might contribute to autoimmune disease, which is triggered when certain immune cells are overactive.
People with DS have extra copies of DYRK1A, and Drs. Khor and Partridge are using the biorepository to learn more about it.
“If we can help people with DS balance their immune systems by blocking this gene, the same approach might work for other people too,” Dr. Partridge says.
Dr. Partridge isn’t only a co-investigator for the study – she and her son are participating in it by donating samples to the biorepository.
“BRI has done a great job of making sure this study is done appropriately and for the right reasons,” she says. “We want to help people with DS live happy and healthy lives. And if we can help everyone else with an autoimmune disease, that would be even better.”