
It started with a red, sore, slightly swollen forearm. At University College London, volunteers had lined up to donate their skin for scientific research while receiving a tiny injection of dead bacteria. There is no chance of infection, only a spark to activate the body’s inflammatory warning system. In the hours that followed, scientists witnessed that spark ignite—and then, amazingly, start to fade under the influence of a medication that helped the immune system know when to stop rather than suppress it.
The concept seems straightforward: an “off switch” is necessary for the immune system. However, for many years, scholars have paid much more attention to the “on” that sets off a defense. What makes white blood cells move? Why do we think that injury or illness causes fever and swelling? The process by which the body determines when the battle is over, known as shutting down, is still mostly unknown.
| Key Discovery | Identification of immune “off switches” including fat-derived molecules (epoxy-oxylipins) and protein complexes (CRL5–SPSB3) that deactivate immune responses. |
|---|---|
| Main Mechanism | Epoxy-oxylipins block the p38 MAPK protein signal, halting harmful immune cell expansion (intermediate monocytes). |
| Clinical Relevance | Potential therapies for chronic inflammation, autoimmune diseases, and even cancer by modulating immune resolution instead of suppression. |
| Study Format | Human clinical trial using UV-killed E. coli to provoke inflammation, then testing immune modulation via the drug GSK2256294. |
| Lead Researchers | Dr. Olivia Bracken and Prof. Derek Gilroy, UCL Faculty of Medical Sciences. |
| Potential Impact | Targeted treatment that resolves immune flares without broadly weakening immunity; faster recovery, reduced pain, and chronic disease management. |
| Reference | UCL News – January 2026 |
A group of unknown fat-derived molecules known as epoxy-oxylipins is at the core of UCL’s recent discovery. They are unknown to the majority of people. They are not as well-known as T cells or cytokines. But they subtly proved to be invaluable in this study. Epoxy-oxylipins instruct a subset of immune cells, known as intermediate monocytes, to stop their progression when they are present in high enough concentrations.
An interesting group of monocytes is intermediates. The long-term defenders are more settled, but the early responders are more aggressive. They occupy the center and can cause issues if they remain there for an extended period of time. Ongoing inflammation. harm to joints. lingering discomfort. The common suspects in conditions like cardiovascular disease and rheumatoid arthritis.
The UCL team didn’t arrive at these molecules by chance. They proceeded from mouse models to human trials before introducing GSK2256294, a medication that inhibits the enzyme that breaks down epoxy-oxylipins. The reasoning was that if the enzyme was blocked, the body would naturally produce more of these relaxing molecules.
They had a point.
Higher epoxy-oxylipin levels, fewer intermediate monocytes, and a quicker resolution of pain were observed by researchers in two volunteer groups—one dosed before inflammation started, the other after it had already begun. Remarkably, there was little change in the injection site’s redness and swelling. The injury was still felt by the body. The immune system, however, proceeded toward resolution more smoothly on the inside.
It’s an important but subtle distinction. There was no immune suppression here. The immune system was being guided, not shut down, by immune modulation.
A single line of lab notes about 12,13-EpOME, the particular epoxy-oxylipin molecule that inhibits the inflammatory signal protein p38 MAPK, caught my attention in the middle of the paper. The idea that millions of people’s lives could be transformed by this microscopic interaction—which is invisible to almost everyone—struck me.
UCL has encapsulated a biological philosophy in addition to a chemical cascade. Healing is active. It is an organized, dynamic process. Disease spreads when that process stops.
There are significant ramifications. A typical flare-up of arthritis is characterized by an influx of immune cells that cause swelling and pain in the joints. Currently available treatments include immune-blocking medications and steroids, both of which have significant adverse effects. However, we might end the flare more quickly and with fewer risks if we could increase the body’s own off switch, perhaps with a medication like GSK2256294.
Consider cardiovascular illness. One of the main factors that destabilizes plaques and causes heart attacks is low-grade, persistent inflammation. Without the widespread suppression that makes patients susceptible to infection, a molecule that subtly encourages the immune system to reduce inflammation may help prevent such incidents.
The restraint of the UCL study contributes to its elegance. A miraculous recovery is not promised. It does not imply that we scrap current therapies. Rather, it suggests an addition that could be used in conjunction with existing treatments to make them safer, more intelligent, and more successful.
There are, of course, still questions. To what extent do these effects persist? Which dosage is appropriate? In some populations, could increasing these molecules have unforeseen consequences? The responses of the human body are rarely linear, after all.
However, the basis is in place.
And it’s not limited to arthritis. It has long been known by cancer researchers that tumor cells employ “switches” to get around the immune system. The larger study conducted by UCL also discusses how bowel cancer cells tamper with DNA repair systems to evade detection. It turns out that the immune system has many switches, brakes, dimmers, and toggles.
Perhaps 21st-century medicine’s main challenge is to figure out how to manage those factors without causing unintended harm.
We may view this study as a turning point in the future if someone takes a capsule at the first sign of an arthritic flare-up and avoids weeks of pain and stiffness. For its quiet accuracy, not its drama. Because it trusted the body’s instincts and made them slightly more effective.

