House dust can lead to allergic asthma (Thinkstock photos/Getty Images)
A bacterial protein in common house dust may worsen allergic responses
to indoor allergens, a new research has revealed.
The finding is the first to
document the presence of the protein flagellin in house dust, bolstering the
link between allergic asthma and the environment.
The research was conducted by scientists from the NIH's National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and Duke University Medical Center.
"Most people with asthma have allergic asthma, resulting
largely from allergic responses to inhaled substances," said the paper's
corresponding author Donald Cook, Ph.D., an NIEHS scientist.
His research team began the study to identify
environmental factors that amplify the allergic responses.
"Although
flagellin is not an allergen, it can boost allergic responses to true
allergens," Cook stated.
After inhaling house dust, mice that were able
to respond to flagellin displayed all of the common symptoms of allergic
asthma, including more mucous production, airway obstruction, and airway
inflammation.
However, mice lacking a gene that detects the presence of flagellin had
reduced levels of these symptoms.
"More work will be required to confirm
our conclusions, but it's possible that cleaning can reduce the amount of house
dust in general, and flagellated bacteria in particular, to reduce the
incidence of allergic asthma," Cook said.
In addition to the mouse study,
the research team also determined that people with asthma have higher levels of
antibodies against flagellin in their blood than do non-asthmatic subjects,
which provides more evidence of a link between environmental factors and
allergic asthma in humans.
"More than 20 million Americans have asthma,
with 4,000 deaths from the disease occurring each year," added Darryl Zeldin, M.D.,
NIEHS scientific director and paper co-author.
"All of these data suggest
that flagellin in common house dust can promote allergic asthma by priming
allergic responses to common indoor allergens," Zeldin noted.
Scientists
published their findings online in the journal Nature Medicine.
Source: Times of India
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