Auto-immune diseases to be a thing of the past!

$50 of $1,000 goal
Given by 1 generous donor in one year

Supporting my sister and anyone in the world sufferings with auto immune diseases and cancer.

Hawke's Bay

My 35 year old sister was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2015 a few months after her wedding after years of mysterious painful undiagnosed symptoms!

I’ve seen first hand the suffering from this awful auto immune disease as well as countless other auto immune diseases that affect some other friends and family and so many people around the world.. they are becoming more and more common these days.

My sister has done the most inspirational fundraising for MS society in the UK and is a kick ass human being with a lust for life and people.. she lights up the room where ever she goes and is beautiful inside and out.....she’s doing all she can to support her health, from nutrition, meditation, exercise, yoga, acupuncture, rest and listening to her body, with an amazing support crew behind her of friends, family and colleagues....but don’t let this beauty trick you as she manages to hide her symptoms very well as she strives to live a normal life.... it’s an honour to be her younger sister and support her where I can... mostly by making her laugh on video calls, but living on the other side of the world from her I feel pretty helpless and just knew I had to do all I can to support the research for a cure in some way...after reading about the research Malaghan are doing I just knew I had to support them in getting the cures!

I believe In their vision and mission so so much!

Lauren albans-clayton's involvement (page creator)

My sister in England has an auto immune disease... let’s find the cure!

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Latest update

MS research projects!  6 March 2020

Here is a summary of 2 of the major research streams in the MS Research Programme.

The first key area for our research is in the process of remyelination during multiple sclerosis (MS). Remyelination is the repair process that leads to the replacement of the myelin sheaths around the nerve axons. These myelin sheaths are targeted and destroyed in MS by the immune system, but they can be naturally repaired by the body through remyelination. However, over time and with age, the repair process is not as efficient as it is when we are younger and so when damage to the myelin sheaths is faster than the repair, permanent loss of the nerves results. It is believed that this is one reason behind the accumulation of disability that occurs in progressive MS. Our group, in collaboration with A/Prof Bronwyn Kivell (Victoria) and Prof Thomas Prisinzano (University of Kentucky), is developing new therapeutics that promote remyelination and enhance the repair of the damaged central nervous system during MS. We are in the process of translating our pre-clinical work to assess for use in humans.

The second key area is in understanding the process by which immune cells invade the brain and cause neuroinflammation. In a healthy state, the passage of immune cells into the brain is severely restricted and regulated, but during neuroinflammation the barriers that regulate this trafficking change, enabling immune cells to more readily enter into the brain. We are interested in understanding how special carbohydrates (i.e. sugar molecules) are involved in this process and if they work differently during health or disease. In collaboration with Dr Olga Zubkova (Ferrier Research Institute), we are investigating novel carbohydrates that can mimic the natural ones involved in immune cell trafficking into the brain. These mimics will help us to dissect the precise pathways by which immune cells enter and exit the brain and are promising drug candidates for future development to treat neuroinflammatory diseases such as MS.

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Bronwyn
Bronwyn on 24 Jan 2020
What a great goal to get behind!
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This campaign started on 20 Jan 2020 and ended on 21 Jan 2021.