Scientists unlock the why and how of an age-old treatment

By By Robert Perkins | 04 Mar 2013

1

A team from University of Southern California and Harvard University has uncovered a key biological mechanism that makes aspirin and omega-3 fatty acids effective at reducing inflammation.

Doctors have long prescribed aspirin together with a diet rich in omega-3s as a way to reduce inflammation caused by the body's own immune system, which can exacerbate heart disease, lung and kidney disease, as well as arthritis and cancer, among other ailments.

Thanks to research led by Nicos Petasis of University of Southern California  and Charles Serhan of Harvard, now they know why.

Studying inflammation in mice, the team determined that aspirin triggers the production of a new form of molecules called resolvins, which are naturally made by the body from omega-3 fatty acids to shut off inflammation.

In particular, Serhan found that one type of resolvin - resolvin D3 - lingers at the site of inflammation, suggesting that it plays a particular role in helping to conclude this immune process.

After making its discovery, the team explored the structure of resolvin D3 to better understand why and how it works to shut off inflammation.

Latest articles

Adani Group outlines $100 billion plan for AI-ready data centre expansion

Adani Group outlines $100 billion plan for AI-ready data centre expansion

Boardroom battle: Starboard Value pushes for majority control of Tripadvisor

Boardroom battle: Starboard Value pushes for majority control of Tripadvisor

Infosys reports 5.5% of quarterly revenue from AI services as monetisation scales

Infosys reports 5.5% of quarterly revenue from AI services as monetisation scales

SpaceX reportedly joins Pentagon contest to develop autonomous drone swarming technology

SpaceX reportedly joins Pentagon contest to develop autonomous drone swarming technology

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Anthropic’s revenue run-rate doubles in India in four months as Claude adoption surges

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Alibaba launches Qwen3.5 as competition heats up in the 'agentic AI' race

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

Big Tech loses billions as AI spending concerns weigh on valuations

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount

UK weighs faster defence spending hike toward 3% as security pressures mount