Islamabad, Feb 4: New research published in the
Journal of Leukocyte Biology suggests that certain strains of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa cause white blood cells to produce high levels of histamine, which
worsens the severity of inflammation and infection.
Could some cases of
asthma actually be caused by an allergic reaction to a common environmental
bacteria? New research findings published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology
suggests that this idea may not be as far-fetched as it seems.
In a
research report appearing in the February 2012 print issue, researchers show a
link between common environmental bacteria and airway inflammation.
Specifically, their research suggests that some strains of Pseudomonas
aeruginosa cause white blood cells to produce very high levels of histamine,
which in turn leads to inflammation, a hallmark symptom of asthma.
"We
hope that these findings in mice will encourage human-focused research regarding
bacterial stimulation of histamine production by white blood cells, like
neutrophils, that are not traditionally associated with allergic inflammation,"
said George Caughey, M.D., a researcher involved in the work from the Veterans
Affairs Medical Center and University of California in San Francisco. "Such
research could improve our understanding of inflammation in bacterial
infections, and help us to craft therapies for relief of inflammation and its
consequences for short and long-term health."
To make this discovery,
scientists studied the effect of two strains of pseudomonas bacteria on isolated
mouse white blood cells tasked with killing bacteria, called neutrophils.
Results showed that one strain killed the neutrophils, but the second strain
produced substances that caused the neutrophils to increase their production of
histamine significantly. To see if their discovery was applicable outside of the
test tube, the histamine-stimulating strain was then used to infect mice to
produce bronchitis and pneumonia. These mice experienced a significant increase
of histamine in their airways and lungs. Additional work showed that the
bacteria persuade neutrophils to produce histamine by causing them to make much
more of the key enzyme in histamine synthesis (histidine decarboxylase) than
neutrophils would otherwise do in the unstimulated state.
"Despite
advances in diagnosing and treating the symptoms of asthma and allergy, our
understanding of the underlying initiating events remains elusive," said John
Wherry, Ph.D., Deputy Editor of the Journal of Leukocyte Biology. "This report
helps shed light on how an 'everyday organism' might trigger asthma and allergy
from an immune cell type not normally thought to be involved in allergic
disease."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Exposure to common environmental bacteria may be source of some allergic inflammation
Exposure to common environmental bacteria may be source of some allergic inflammation
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