HomeHealth & FitnessNobel Prize for Medicine 2025 Explained: How regulatory T cells stop your immune system from attacking itself

Nobel Prize for Medicine 2025 Explained: How regulatory T cells stop your immune system from attacking itself

The Nobel-winning research reveals how the body controls its own defences, helping fight cancer and autoimmune diseases.

October 07, 2025 / 18:03 IST
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Nobel-winning discovery reveals how the body’s own immune cells can prevent “friendly fire,” unlocking new hope for cancer and autoimmune disease treatment.
Nobel-winning discovery reveals how the body’s own immune cells can prevent “friendly fire,” unlocking new hope for cancer and autoimmune disease treatment.

Three researchers on Monday won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine for their discovery of how particular immune cells prevent the body's defences from attacking themselves. Their identification of regulatory T cells, or Tregs, is leading to improved outcomes for organ transplants, new approaches to cancer treatment, and even new treatments for autoimmune diseases.

What Does The Immune System Do?

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The immune system primarily defends your health by spotting infections, killing dangerous cells, and overall maintaining the health. Although sometimes, this strong defense system malfunctions and begins to targeting healthy tissues while ignoring malignant ones.

Regulatory T cells or Tregs, sometimes referred to as the immune system's "stop signals," make sure that the immune system doesn't cause harm to itself.