Smoking is harmful to the human organism in
relation to the occurrence of allergies says by a team of scientist, who has
found evidence for this: Smoking affects the development of peripheral
allergy-relevant stem cells in the blood. In order to present this result Dr.
Irina Lehmann and Dr. Kristin Weiße chose a new scientific path: The
combination of exposure analysis and stem cell research.
Stem cells are not specialised, propagate without
limit and can develop to different cell types. From these the different cell
and tissue types of the human organism, including the allergy-promoting
eosinophil granulocytes, are differentiated. Progenitor cells, e.g.
eosinophil/basophilic progenitors, which mature in the bone marrow and are then
washed out into the bloodstream -- the so-called periphery -- function as a
link between unspecialised stem cells and specialised tissue and organ cells.
Until now, whether and to what extent environmental contaminants affect this
maturation and release has not been investigated.
The UFZ team of Dr. Irina Lehmann and Dr. Kristin
Weiße undertook their investigations from this point. Two facts were already
known from a number of earlier studies: Firstly that the blood of allergy
sufferers -- whether children or adults -- shows evidence of increased
eosinophil/basophil progenitor levels. Secondly, that the occurrence of such
peripheral progenitors in the blood of the umbilical cord indicates a higher risk
for subsequent allergies. For the first time, the hypothesis which Dr. Kristin
Weiße and Dr. Irina Lehmann developed on this basis combined this knowledge
from stem cell research with the results of many years of exposure research at
the UFZ. The researchers characterise their approach in the following way:
"We wanted to clarify the relationship between environmental influences
and the maturation and differentiation of the progenitor cells on the one hand
and its contribution to the occurrence of allergies on the other hand.
Specifically, we wanted to know whether the occurrence of allergy-relevant
progenitor cells in the blood of infants can be changed by environmental
influences."
The results of the study, based on the data
collected from 60 children aged one year, were recently published in the
British medical journal "Clinical & Experimental Allergy": It was
found that children with skin manifestations, such as atopic dermatitis or
cradle cap, have increased levels of eosinophil progenitors in their blood. In
this connection, it was shown for the first time that children already
afflicted show particularly sensitive reactions when exposed to environmental
contaminants: The offspring of families exposed to significant levels of
volatile organic compounds (VOC) at home were found to have considerably higher
allergy-relevant eosinophilic/basophilic progenitor cell levels. "That
VOCs, large amounts of which are released with cigarette smoke, have the
greatest effect on stem cells was not entirely unexpected," explains Dr.
Irina Lehmann. "Just as important, however," adds Dr. Kristin Weiße,
is "that we can show that alterations in the number of stem cells as a
result of harmful substances take place only in children who have already been
afflicted with skin manifestations." This leads to the conclusion: There
is a relationship between the genetic predisposition for a disease and
environmental influences -- there are environmental and life style factors
which determine whether a genetic predisposition is in fact realised or not.
Considerable logistical effort underlies this
knowledge: On the one hand there is the long-term study "LiNA -- Life
Style and Environmental Factors and their Influence on The Risk of
Allergy" in Newborn Children, a joint project of the Helmholtz Centre for
Environmental Research and the Städtisches Klinikum St. Georg in Leipzig. 622
mothers, with a total of 629 children born, were recruited for the study
between 2006 and 2008. In order to also take prenatal environmental influences
into account -- in contrast with earlier comparable studies of newborn children
-- mothers were already included in the investigations during pregnancy and the
children from the time of birth. At the same time, it was necessary to become
familiar with the methods required for stem cell analysis at the laboratory of
the Canadian cooperation partner, Professor Judah Denburg of the McMaster
University in Hamilton and to transfer this knowledge to Germany. Dr. Kristin
Weiße spent six months in Canada working in the group of Professor Denburg in
order to acquire the necessary know-how and profit from the experience of the
Canadian partners. Dr. Lehmann and Dr. Weiße agree that "with the subject
of environmental contamination and stem cells we have established an exciting
new field of research." The UFZ team is currently the only one in the
world investigating this relationship with analytical precision and methodical
patience. The LiNA study, in the course of which mothers and their children can
be observed over several years, represents a unique basis.
Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials
provided by Helmholtz
Centre For Environmental Research - UFZ.
Note:
Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please
contact the source cited above.
Journal Reference:
1.
K.
Weisse, I. Lehmann, D. Heroux, T. Kohajda, G. Herberth, S. Röder, M. Bergen, M.
Borte, J. Denburg. The LINA cohort: indoor chemical exposure,
circulating eosinophil/basophil (Eo/B) progenitors and early life skin
manifestations. Clinical & Experimental Allergy, 2012; 42
(9): 1337 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2012.04024.x
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