While looking at recent research reports, I may have stumbled upon another reason why avoiding vegetables helps to reduce MC symptoms. It seems that cruciferous vegetables regulate the level of a cell-surface protein known as the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), and AhR, in turn, regulates the level of intra-epithelial lymphocytes, (IELs). An elevated IEL count, as we all know, is the primary marker of lymphocytic colitis.
So, in essence, what this research shows is that if someone doesn't eat cruciferous vegetables, their epithelial levels of AhR will fall, and that in turn, will cause their level of IELs to fall. Now the point of the research articles, of course, is to maintain that eating those vegetables is essential, in order to maintain a sufficiently high level of IELs for good immune system health. For those of us with MC, though, we'd like to see those IEL levels as low as possible, because those IELs are apparently the source of our intestinal inflammation.
I have a hunch that there's a lot more to the equation, than the simple conclusions indicated by the reports connected with this discovery. This may open the door, though, to someone who understands IBDs, to allow additional discoveries that may eventually lead to some real insight into how this actually connects with the etiology of IBDs.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 121509.htmIt turns out that green vegetables -- from bok choy to broccoli -- are the source of a chemical signal that is important to a fully functioning immune system. They do this by ensuring that immune cells in the gut and the skin known as intra-epithelial lymphocytes (IELs) function properly.
"It is still surprising to me," said Marc Veldhoen of The Babraham Institute in Cambridge. "I would have expected cells at the surface would play some role in the interaction with the outside world, but such a clear cut interaction with the diet was unexpected. After feeding otherwise healthy mice a vegetable-poor diet for two to three weeks, I was amazed to see 70 to 80 percent of these protective cells disappeared."
http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674%2811%2901136-6
How about that?
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