(Press-News.org) OKLAHOMA CITY – For the millions of people living with lupus – a chronic autoimmune disease that can damage the kidneys, brain and other vital organs – treatment options remain limited and often come with serious side effects. A $1.7 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will allow a University of Oklahoma researcher to continue investigating a protein that may help explain why the disease develops and how it might be treated more precisely.
Carol Webb, Ph.D., a professor at the OU College of Medicine, has spent her career studying the protein ARID3a. Her research has shown that people with lupus have higher numbers of B cells (a type of immune cell) containing ARID3a than healthy individuals, and patients with more of these cells tend to have more active and severe disease. In mouse research models, increasing ARID3a in B cells caused the animals to produce harmful antibodies that attacked their own tissues, similar to what is observed in lupus.
“Lupus is a complicated disease in which the immune system turns against the body and can damage organs such as the kidneys and brain, making it especially challenging to study and treat,” Webb said. “We believe these B cells may eventually help us detect disease earlier and guide the development of more effective, targeted therapies.”
In lupus, the immune system attacks the body by mistake. Normally, young B cells – the immune cells that make antibodies – must pass an important “safety check” to make sure they do not target healthy tissue. Webb’s research suggests that ARID3a may disrupt that safety system.
Her team found that in healthy people, these young B cells do not contain ARID3a. But in people with lupus, some of these young B cells do contain the protein. This finding suggests that ARID3a may allow harmful cells to slip past the body’s natural protections.
With the new NIH funding, the researchers will focus on three main goals: identifying the genes directly controlled by ARID3a, understanding how the protein helps B cells break normal safety rules, and testing whether blocking ARID3a in mice can reduce lupus symptoms.
If the studies are successful, ARID3a could become both a warning sign of disease activity and a possible target for new treatments. Instead of suppressing the entire immune system, which is how many current lupus drugs work, future therapies might more precisely target the pathways that cause harm.
“In the past 60 years, the Food and Drug Administration has approved only three drugs for lupus,” Webb said. “We really need a more effective treatment.”
###
About the project
Research reported in this news release was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, a component of the National Institutes of Health, under award number R01AI189437. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Webb also received a bridge grant from Presbyterian Health Foundation in Oklahoma City that contributed to her earning the NIH grant.
About the University of Oklahoma
Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university with campuses in Norman, Oklahoma City and Tulsa. As the state’s flagship university, OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. In Oklahoma City, the OU Health Campus is one of the nation’s few academic health centers with seven health profession colleges located on the same campus. The OU Health Campus serves approximately 4,000 students in more than 70 undergraduate and graduate degree programs spanning Oklahoma City and Tulsa and is the leading research institution in Oklahoma. For more information about the OU Health Campus, visit www.ouhsc.edu.
END
A new study published in Biochar presents a practical and regulation-compliant design for producing biochar on farms that could dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture while permanently removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Agriculture contributes around 12 percent of the United Kingdom’s total greenhouse gas emissions, with manure management alone responsible for nearly 10 percent of the sector’s emissions. At the same time, large volumes of crop residues such as straw are often underutilized, creating missed opportunities for climate mitigation.
Researchers from the University ...
A new scientific review reveals how residues from traditional Chinese medicine production can be transformed into high performance biochar materials capable of removing toxic pollutants from water and soil. The work highlights a promising pathway to convert large volumes of herbal waste into valuable environmental solutions.
As the traditional Chinese medicine industry continues to expand, so does the generation of herbal residues. These materials are typically discarded through landfilling, stacking, or incineration, creating environmental burdens and wasting potentially useful resources. At the same ...
Researchers have developed a novel engineered biochar that can simultaneously immobilize arsenic and cadmium in contaminated water and agricultural soils, offering a promising new strategy for addressing two of the world’s most dangerous toxic elements.
The study, recently published in Agricultural Ecology and Environment, introduces a sulfur-ferrihydrite-modified biochar designed to tackle the complex challenge of co-contamination by arsenic and cadmium. These pollutants frequently occur together in agricultural regions impacted by mining, industrial emissions, and long-term fertilizer use, posing serious ...
Cleveland & New York – March 3, 2026 – Newly published research by Cleveland Clinic and Dyania Health demonstrates how a medically trained large language model system can accurately and efficiently screen electronic medical records (EMRs) to identify patients who are eligible for a rare disease clinical trial.
Published in The Journal of Cardiac Failure, the official journal of the Heart Failure Society of America, the study offers real-world evidence that artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled medical chart review can improve the speed, accuracy and equity of trial enrollment.
The ...
NEW YORK, March 3, 2026 — A new scientific study led by paleontologist Stephen Chester, an Anthropology professor at the CUNY Graduate Center and Brooklyn College, is shedding fresh light on how the earliest known primate relatives evolved and spread across North America after the extinction of the dinosaurs.
The research—published as the cover article in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology—was conducted in collaboration with scientists from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. It focuses on Purgatorius, a small, tree-dwelling mammal that lived about 66 million years ago and is considered the earliest known relative of all primates, ...
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — For years, treating gum disease has meant scraping away plaque, cutting out damaged tissue or turning to antibiotics that kill bacteria indiscriminately. While newer therapies can regenerate lost tissue, doctors still lack a precise way to stop the infection without harming the mouth’s healthy microbiome.
New research from the University of Florida College of Dentistry offers a breakthrough. Researchers have discovered that the primary bacterium driving gum disease carries an internal “genetic brake” that controls its ...
If Canadian jurisdictions mandated warning labels on alcohol and minimum pricing tied to the number of standard drinks in a container, it could prevent hundreds of cancer diagnoses and deaths, according to a new study led by University of Victoria’s Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research (CISUR).
The research, published in Lancet Public Health, set out to see how different alcohol policy scenarios could potentially reduce the number of alcohol-related cancers in Canada. The researchers looked at five scenarios: two involving setting price minimums tied to standard drinks in a container — also known as minimum unit pricing—with prices set at $1.75 and $2.00 per ...
Highlights:
A preliminary study has found higher levels of air pollution in New Jersey from the 2023 Canadian wildfires were associated with a higher rate of stroke and more severe strokes.
During heavy wildfire smoke days, researchers found more people had strokes and those strokes tended to be more severe.
The study does not prove that wildfires cause or worsen stroke. It only shows an association.
Exposure to higher levels of ozone was associated with a higher incidence of stroke and more bleeding strokes.
Exposure to higher levels of particulate matter ...
Understanding how cells are organized and how their molecular components interact in a coordinated and cooperative manner is a central goal of modern life sciences. To answer these questions, researchers need to observe many structures inside the same cell at once and map how they are arranged and interact. This requires “multiplexed super-resolution microscopy” – an advanced imaging approach that reveals cellular details far beyond the limits of conventional light microscopes. However, existing methods are often technically demanding, difficult to reproduce, and not well suited for fragile biological ...
Dr. John Apolzan, director of the Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism Laboratory at Pennington Biomedical Research Center, published an editorial on the importance of fruit intake to vascular health in the Journal of the American Heart Association, a leading peer-reviewed publication focused on cardiovascular and cerebrovascular health research.
The editorial, “Fruit-Rich Dietary Pattern Improves Endothelial Function: Implications for Food Is Medicine,” is a commentary on the study “Effects of Increasing Total Fruit Intake With Avocado and Mango on Endothelial ...