• Jobs available, possible earnings of up to EUR2000 per month, selling TME on the streets of Munich. Contact us now!
  • TME Looking for Sales Persons, please get in contact
Wednesday 19th June 2013

Allergies on the rise, but your gut may help you fight them

On one hand, new research shows that pollen levels, a common cause of allergies, have been increasing for the past 10 years, and are likely to keep increasing across Europe in the upcoming years. On the other hand, another study is now suggesting that your gut bacteria may actually help you fight these allergies.

Almost 25% of all Germans suffer from allergies, and this number is likely to increase, according to a new a study led by Prof. Annette Menzel at the Technichal University Munich (TUM) that analyzed over 1200 long-term pollen series from 23 species of plants from multiple locations across Europe.

The study, published in the journal PLoS ONE on April 13 allowed researchers to calculate trends of annual pollen indices over the last 10 years, and to compare different allergenic pollen species in different climates. Their results show an increase of pollen concentrations over recent years. In Europe, pollen concentration has been on the rise by about 3% per year in urban areas, and by 1% in rural areas. The most likely reason for this pollen increase is climate change, but not necessarily due to increasing temperatures, but most likely due to increased concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air, which promotes plant growth, and therefore, pollen production. On top of this, we now see an increased pollen season in Europe, fueled by the introduction of foreign plants and trees.

"In Germany, it is now only in November that we do not see allergenic pollen - so the season of suffering for people with hay fever is getting more serious," said Prof. Annette Menzel in a statement for the BBC. "On a local scale, planners should be more aware of what sort of problems may arise from the urban trees they're planting. Often they use birch trees, for example, because of their nice silver colour, not aware that they leave allergenic problems behind."

Now, this is just half of this story: there will likely be more pollen, and for longer time. But there is some good news. Gut bacteria, which have a win-win relationship with their human host, may be of some help.

An international team led by David Artis, and David Hill, from University of Pennsylvania, and which included researcher Ellen D Renner from Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich found that these gut bacteria might actually play an important role in influencing and controlling allergic responses.

Their study, published in the journal Nature Medicine on March 25, shows that selective manipulation of your gut bacteria may be beneficial in treating some allergic diseases.

"Studies in human patients suggest that changes in commensal populations or exposure to broad spectrum antibiotics can predispose patients to the development of systemic allergic diseases," Hill explains in a statement to the press. "In addition, previous studies in animal models have shown that commensal bacteria can influence local immune cells in the intestine. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which commensal bacteria influence the host immune system, in particular the branches of the host immune system that regulate allergic inflammation, are not well understood."

In their study researchers focused on mice, studying a specific type of white blood cell called basophils, and the relationship between basophil responses and allergic disease. Mice where treated with antibiotics targeting specific gut bacteria with the goal of measuring how levels of circulating basophils in the blood were affected.

Their findings showed that mice treated with antibiotics, which reduced their natural gut bacterial flora, had a stronger allergic reaction. In their study they used a specific mouse model of allergic inflammation in the lung, which shares similarities with human asthma. Antibiotic treatment resulted in significantly elevated basophil responses as well as an increase in basophil-mediated allergic airway inflammation. Their results strongly suggest that gut bacteria are capable of influencing the response to allergens.

All in all, if you manage to cope with the upcoming rising tide of allergens, perhaps you should thank the little microbes living in your gut.


Add comment
Name
Smile Sad Huh Laugh Mad Tongue Crying Grin Wink Scared Cool Blush Unsure Shocked Confused Thumbs up Thumb down
Comment

Migraines linked to sleep disorders

Credit: morguefile
New research from the University of California San Francisco, US, has identified a gene alteration linked to both migraines and a sleep disorder. Migraine is a complicated disorder characterized by severe headache and sensitivity to light and sound. In some instances it can cause nausea and vomiting. Migraine affects over 10% of the world's population, which amounts to a staggering 700 million people, according to reports by the National Institute of Neurological disorders and Stroke of the United States. For several years, scientists and doctors have believed that the constriction and...

Heroin vaccine blocks drug addiction in rats

Credit: everystockphoto.com
A team of scientists from The Scripps Research Institute in California, USA, has reported promising results for a new vaccine against heroin. The vaccine can target not only heroin directly, but also its specific breakdown products in the blood, effectively stopping them from reaching the brain, at least in rats. "Vaccines against drugs of abuse, including heroin, have been tested and developed since the early 1970s, however most attempts failed due to either targeting morphine or targeting heroin and all their metabolites in a very non-specific way", said Dr Joel Schlosburg, first author in...

Hair reveals long-term stress

Cortisol extracted from hair reveals long-term stress.
When you are getting closer to an important deadline or an exam, your heart starts running faster and you might feel hot and even begin to sweat. It is all about an environmental condition, stimulus or threat, called 'stressor'. When the brain detects a stressor, a physiological response is initiated, including a stress reaction (like the fast heart beat), a period of recovery and long-term adaptive responses, such as the enforcement of memories of stressful experiences.

Any stress reaction involves two sets of hormones: catecholamines and glucocorticoids. Catecholamines, like adrenaline and...

Does air pollution increase heart attacks and strokes?

Smog in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (Credit: wikipediacommons)
The longer you live in a polluted city, the more quickly you develop risk factors for heart attack and stroke, researchers found. We have known that air pollution can be fatal since some 12,000 people died during the smog that choked London in 1952. Today, air pollution is suspected of killing 1.3 million people a year, the World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated. Previously, researchers assumed that air pollution primarily caused lung disease and cancer, but in the past decade they began to realize that its larger impact is increased heart attack and strokes.

The evidence linking...

How breast cancer spreads into the brain

Brain tumor formed after injection of human breast cancer cells into mice. Credit: Dario Marchetti.
Cancer cells can escape from tumors, sneak through the bloodstream, and seed new tumors, or metastases, in distant organs. In a recent study of breast cancer, researchers captured the rogue individuals among these circulating tumor cells (CTCs) that metastasized to the brain - a deadly kind of metastasis. They hope to use these cells to understand the fundamentals of brain metastasis, and eventually to detect the early stages of metastasis and prevent it.

Almost all cancer deaths are caused not by the patient's primary tumor but by metastasis, and a sizable portion of breast cancers...

Kidneys grown in the lab work in animals

Bioengineered rat kidney in bioreactor incubator. (Credit: Ott Lab, Center for Regenerative Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital)
Researchers from the Massachusetts General Hospital in the US have grown rat kidneys in the laboratory that produced urine when transplanted into living animals. This is an important step towards the production of customised organs for transplantation into people with kidney failure, which could replace donor organ transplants. Patients with kidney failure can be treated with dialysis, but can only be cured with a kidney transplant. About 8,000 people are waiting for a donor kidney in Germany, but only 3,000 kidney transplants take place each year. Patients may wait up to seven years for a...

Molecule that triggers itch sensation is found

Credit: wikipediacommons
Researchers from the National Institute of Dental and Cranofacial Research in Maryland, USA, discovered the molecule that triggers the brain response to itch. The study, which was published in Science, was done in mice, but similar results are expected in humans. The team, led by neuroscientist Dr Mark Hoon, searched for compounds involved in the sensation of itch in sensory nerve cells, which are specialized in responding to physical stimuli from pain to temperature changes. "We know these cells are also required for itch" says Dr Hoon, but so far, little is known about how they recognize...

New technique detects early oesophageal cancer

Histology of oesophagus tissue.
Almost 500,000 new cases of oesophageal cancer are diagnosed worldwide every year. However, diagnosis usually only occurs at an advanced stage, and survival over 5 years is less than 15%. As this type of cancer does not form a tumour-like growth, but instead remains flat in appearance, it is extremely difficult to detect early with conventional screening methods. In a recent study published in Science Translational Medicine, a team of researchers and physicians developed a new technique for oesophageal cancer detection using a fluorescently-labelled molecule that sticks to pre-malignant cells...

Mood swings on wings

Credit: wikipediacommons
Have you got a deadline coming up soon? Does it make you feel anxious, sleepless and stressed out? Some of us respond to tight deadlines by burning the midnight oil and getting the work done, but others simply give up, crushed with a feeling of helplessness that no matter how much effort one puts in, it is going to make no difference. It turns out that we are not alone. Scientists show that even pesky fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) exhibit similar behavior when faced with a difficult situation. New research published in Current Biology, and led by Dr Martin Heisenberg from the Rudolf...

Cancer drug works by recruiting tumor 'killer' cells

New research from the Manchester Collaborative Centre for Inflammatory Research in the UK explains why the cancer drug Rituximab is so effective at killing cancerous cells. Rituximab is a drug widely used in treatments of diseases where an excess of B white blood cells is produced, such as in many blood cell cancers and in autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis. Rituximab acts by triggering the destruction of B cells by forcing them to commit suicide, or by recruiting so-called natural killer white blood cells to destroy them. Despite the efficacy of this important drug, it is not...

Brain cells made from skin raise hopes for new neurodegenerative disease treatments

Mouse nerve cells (in green).
A research team led by Dr Paul Tesar at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, USA, has transformed skin cells into a type of brain cells that is destroyed in neurodegenerative diseases, such as multiple sclerosis and cerebral palsy. These cells - oligodendrocytes - produce a protective layer of fat called myelin around nerve cells, ensuring accurate transmission of brain impulses. Loss of myelin in neurodegenerative diseases can have a devastating impact. For example, in multiple sclerosis, poor coordination is an indication that brain signals fail to transmit properly...

A mathematical window into schizophrenia

John Nash was a mathematical genius who suffered from schizophrenia.
The Oscar-winning movie "The Beautiful Mind" shows the mathematical prodigy John Nash having many imaginary conversations with people. It was not until he realised that the little girl with whom he had been talking with never grew up, even though years had passed since their first encounter, did he finally admit to be schizophrenic. Schizophrenia is a life long brain disorder where patients usually reside in a "non-existent" alternative reality, similarly to John Nash. According to reports from the World Health Organisation, seven in a thousand adults are afflicted by this disorder. Overall,...