12. November 2024

How Immune Cells “Sniff Out” Pathogens How Immune Cells “Sniff Out” Pathogens

Researchers from the University of Bonn are using an innovative method to watch immune receptors go about their business

Immune cells are capable of detecting infections just like a sniffer dog, using special sensors known as Toll-like receptors, or TLRs for short. But what signals activate TLRs, and what is the relationship between the scale and nature of this activation and the substance being detected? In a recent study, researchers from the University of Bonn and the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) used an innovative method to answer these questions. The approach that they took might help to speed up the search for drugs to combat infectious diseases, cancer, diabetes or dementia. Their findings have been published in the journal “Nature Communications.”

How Immune Cells “Sniff Out” Pathogens
How Immune Cells “Sniff Out” Pathogens - Felicitas Lauber (left), Dr. Janine Holze (center) and Professor Günther Weindl (right) - used an innovative method to observe immune receptors at work. © K. Limani, Uni Bonn
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BIGS DrugS PhD student Felicitas Lauber is co-autor. Congratulation!

Link to Uni Bonn Press

Link to nature communications

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