Pellegrini and his colleagues hope that scientists can study the gene further and use it as a drug target to fight a large spectrum of diseases.
"It's like an accelerator. In infectious diseases, you want to slam on the brakes on this gene, and for autoimmune diseases, you want to push the accelerator to make it work much harder to stop the whole immune response," said Pellegrini.
"The more the gene works, the less of an immune response there is. And the less active the gene is, the more the immune response is."
(Reporting by Tan Ee Lyn; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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