|
Blocking Effects Of Viral Infections May
Prevent Asthma In Young Children
"A severe respiratory infection in infancy greatly
increases the risk of developing asthma," says
the study's lead author Mitchell Grayson, M.D., assistant
professor of medicine in the Division of Allergy and
Immunology. "Less than one in 30 people who don't
suffer a severe respiratory infection as a baby develop
asthma, but of those who do get these infections, one
in five goes on to have asthma."
Grayson and colleagues recently published their research
in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. They found
that mice that developed asthma-like symptoms after
a severe respiratory viral infection had an unusual
immune reaction. During the infection, the mice produced
antibodies and immune signals similar to those produced
during an allergic response, instead of those typically
made in response to infection. That started a chain
reaction that led to asthma. The researchers propose
that a similar reaction occurs in some people who suffer
severe respiratory viral infections.
"We think genetically predisposed individuals
will tend to have this kind of immune reaction to a
severe respiratory viral infection," Grayson says. "In
those people an allergic-type response could be part
of their antiviral immune response. That sets them
up to make antibodies against a lot of environmental
substances, like pet dander or pollen, and they can
go on to develop allergies or asthma."
Reports by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
indicate that the number of people with asthma in the
United States rose from approximately 7 million in
1980 to about 20 million in 2003. The reasons for this
trend are unclear, Grayson indicates. But he suggests
that a growing population density and the resulting
increase in transmission of respiratory viral infections
might be a cause.
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a common source
of respiratory infections. In the United States nearly
all children have been infected with RSV by two or
three years of age. Severe RSV infections, typified
by persistent coughing, wheezing and gasping for breath,
send many thousands of children to the hospital each
year.
To investigate the connection between severe respiratory
viral infections and subsequent asthma, the researchers
used mice genetically selected to have an asthma susceptibility
and infected them with a virus similar to RSV. They
found that severe respiratory infections in the mice
induced an allergic-type immune response and ultimately
caused long-term changes in the airways of the lungs
that are hallmarks of chronic asthma.
The researchers discovered that certain immune cells
in the mouse lungs reacted to severe viral infections
by releasing compounds that instigated an inflammatory
response. That in turn induced many lung airway cells
to transform into mucus-producing cells, which can
cause the obstruction of lung passages and shortness
of breath characteristic of asthma.
The researchers found that interfering with this process
by altering the immune cells or removing the inflammatory
compounds they secreted prevented overgrowth of mucus-producing
cells.
The findings promise a new approach to asthma prevention,
according to Grayson. "This offers a different
way of thinking about what happens in the development
of asthma," Grayson says. "It may be possible
to prevent many cases of asthma and other chronic inflammatory
airway diseases by stopping allergic-type antibody
production after a severe viral infection in infants." |