(Press-News.org) Contact information: Bonnie Ward
contact@liai.org
619-303-3160
La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology
La Jolla Institute scientist identifies pivotal cellular protein underlying eczema
Discovery opens new therapeutic avenue for chronic skin condition affecting millions
SAN DIEGO – (January 9th, 2014) Researchers from the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology have revealed a critical player in the cellular interactions leading to eczema – a chronic inflammatory skin condition affecting more than 14 million U.S. children and adults.
In a study published today, Toshiaki Kawakami, M.D., Ph.D., and his research team provide information which supports – for the first time in humans – the long-held theory that mast cells are a key culprit in causing eczema, also known as atopic dermatitis. Further, the team showed that a cellular protein, known as STAT5, plays a pivotal role by triggering major increases in mast cells in the skin of some eczema sufferers. The discovery opens the door to creating new therapies to prevent or better treat eczema based on blocking STAT5 in mast cells.
The team conducted its studies using skin samples from eczema patients. "We found that the number of mast cells, which we have previously shown to be important in mouse atopic dermatitis, is increased in human patients," says Kawakami. "We also showed that these mast cells contain high levels of the active form of STAT5."
Kawakami says the researchers also tested their theory on STAT5's importance in mice. "When STAT5 is knocked out in the mast cells (of specially engineered mice), the mice become resistant to atopic dermatitis," says Kawakami. "This indicates that STAT5 regulatory mechanisms in mast cells are important for the pathogenesis of this disease."
The findings were published online in Cell Reports in a paper entitled "Critical role for mast-cell Stat5 activity in skin inflammation." The study was supported in part by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a component of the National Institutes of Health, under contract number N01 AI40030.
Eczema is a condition in which the skin becomes inflamed or irritated and is marked by redness, itchiness and dry, cracked skin. The exact cause of eczema is unknown, but it's thought to be linked to an overactive response by the body's immune system to allergens and irritants, similar to other allergic diseases such as asthma and food allergy. Eczema is more common in children than adults, since it sometimes resolves with age. About 10.7 percent of U.S. children and 3 percent of adults are estimated to be affected.
Kawakami says this finding is a continuation of his nearly 10-year effort to pinpoint the cascade of key cellular actions involved in eczema. Initially working in mice, his latest study enabled human confirmation of his key findings. "We now know that, in eczema, the mechanisms we found in mice are also operative in human disease," says Kawakami. Along with showing that mast cells and STAT5 drive the eczema process in humans, this study also found an enzyme -- Phospholipase C-beta3 (PLC-3) – that can block the activation. PLC-3 has a calming effort on STAT5 and can prevent it from driving up the mast cell numbers, explains Kawakami. "The mast cell numbers are inversely correlated with PLC-3 levels," he says. "The more PLC-3, the fewer the mast cells."
Mast cells have long been known to be central players in causing allergies. However until recently their role in eczema was strongly suspected, but not clear. In July of 2013, Kawakami published a study demonstrating the mast cell's importance in mouse models of eczema, followed by his current paper showing it in human skin samples.
His paper also included a genetic analysis, which showed that the four genes involved in mouse atopic dermatitis, including the genes for STAT5 and PLC-3, are also contributors to human atopic dermatitis.
###
Other researchers in a multinational team contributed to this study, including those from Johns Hopkins University; University of California San Diego; National Research Institute for Child Health and Development (Tokyo); RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences (IMS-RCAI); Saga Medical University; Brigham and Women's Hospital, and University of Technology Dresden.
About La Jolla Institute
Founded in 1988, La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology is a nonprofit, independent biomedical research institute focused on improving human health through increased understanding of the immune system. Its scientists carry out research seeking new knowledge leading to the prevention of disease through vaccines and the treatment and cure of infectious diseases, cancer, inflammatory, and autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 (juvenile) diabetes, Crohn's disease and asthma. La Jolla Institute's research staff includes more than 150 Ph.D.s and M.D.s. To learn more about the Institute's work, visit http://www.lji.org.
La Jolla Institute scientist identifies pivotal cellular protein underlying eczema
Discovery opens new therapeutic avenue for chronic skin condition affecting millions
2014-01-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Unfit, lean people are better protected against heart attacks than fit, obese people
2014-01-09
Unfit, lean people are better protected against heart attacks than fit, obese people
In a study published in the European Heart Journal, a research team at Umeå University, Sweden, has shown that physical fitness in your teens can reduce the risk of heart ...
EU policy is driving up demand for pollination faster than honeybee numbers
2014-01-09
EU policy is driving up demand for pollination faster than honeybee numbers
Research conducted by the University of Reading's Centre for Agri-Environmental Research, and funded by the EU FP7 project STEP and the Insect Pollinators Initiative Crops project, indicates that ...
A good outcome for the CHILD-INNOVAC project: successful test in humans of a nasal vaccine against pertussis
2014-01-09
A good outcome for the CHILD-INNOVAC project: successful test in humans of a nasal vaccine against pertussis
The CHILD-INNOVAC European research programme, coordinated by Inserm, has enabled the development ...
Eye-catching electronics
2014-01-09
Eye-catching electronics
Thin film transistors on parylene membrane
This news release is available in German. Niko Münzenrieder submerges a ficus leaf in water containing pieces of a shiny metallic membrane. Using tweezers, he carefully moves one of ...
Cancer drug protects against diabetes
2014-01-09
Cancer drug protects against diabetes
Very low doses of a drug used to treat certain types of cancer protect the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas and prevent the development of diabetes mellitus type 1 in mice. The medicine works by lowering the ...
Prisoners believe they are just as law abiding as non-prisoners
2014-01-09
Prisoners believe they are just as law abiding as non-prisoners
The belief that we consider ourselves better than our peers holds true to convicted criminals as well.
Research from the University of Southampton has shown that prisoners believe themselves ...
Free public education that pays for itself?
2014-01-09
Free public education that pays for itself?
London, UK (January 09, 2014) Education funding, particularly at university level, is tighter than ever under current austerity measures. A new study published by SAGE in the journal Theory & Research in Education proposes ...
New imaging technique signals a breakthrough in the treatment of IBS
2014-01-09
New imaging technique signals a breakthrough in the treatment of IBS
Scientists at The University of Nottingham are leading the world in exploiting MRI technology to assist in the treatment and diagnosis of irritable bowel syndrome, a condition ...
Researchers discover a tumor suppressor gene in a very aggressive lung cancer
2014-01-09
Researchers discover a tumor suppressor gene in a very aggressive lung cancer
In addition to identifying the tumor suppressor role of MAX in lung cancer, the group led by Montse Sanchez-Cespedes has unveiled a functional relationship between ...
Maternal stress hormones and maternal smoking increase daughter's risk of nicotine dependence
2014-01-09
Maternal stress hormones and maternal smoking increase daughter's risk of nicotine dependence
Reports new study in Biological Psychiatry
Philadelphia, PA, January 9, 2014 – Tobacco smoking by pregnant women has long been viewed as a public health risk because of smoking's ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
This temporary tattoo could detect an unwanted drug in your drink
Screening for cardiovascular disease marker in community health centers may reduce risk
Watermarks offer no defense against deepfakes
Pusan National University researchers investigate how air pollution triggers immune imbalance and lung damage
New study validates insulin nasal spray to deliver Alzheimer’s drug directly to the brain
Hidden in plain sight: A century-old museum specimen turns out to be a landmark in evolution
People with substance use disorder were 24% more likely to require unplanned hospital readmission within 30 days of previous discharge
New study brings vaccine hopes for deadly Nipah virus
Can a compound produced by deep-sea bacteria treat cancer?
How does infection with respiratory syncytial virus affect the health of older adults?
Will implantable brain-computer interfaces soon benefit people with motor impairments?
Can certain fungi boost the micronutrient content of bread wheat?
AI serves as ‘crystal ball’ for predicting outcomes in hospitalized cirrhosis patients
Transfer printing technology for lithium protective layers to prevent battery explosions
Beetroot juice lowers blood pressure in older people by changing oral microbiome
Metal-free supercapacitor stack delivers 200 volts from just 3.8 cm³
Spatial multi-omics maps how metformin protects precisely across diabetic kidney zones
Weight loss benefits of Tirzepatide persist after stopping treatment in Chinese adults
Interference to astronomy the unintended consequence of faster internet
Women politicians judged more harshly than men, research finds
Surprising rocky worlds revealed around a small star
UC Davis Health receives $3.6 million grant from NIH to improve eye gene therapy
Heatwaves to increase in frequency, duration under global warming
GLP-1 diabetes drugs likely trump metformin for curbing dementia risk in type 2 diabetes
Annual UK cost of mental health disorder PTSD likely tops £40 billion
Study: Powerlifting through breast cancer – how a breast cancer survivor defied chemotherapy with strength trainin
Sustainability Accelerator selects 41 new projects with potential for rapid scale-up
First impressions count: How babies are talked about during ultrasounds impacts parent perceptions, caregiving relationship
Next-gen tech can detect disease biomarker in period blood
UTA unveils supercomputing research hub
[Press-News.org] La Jolla Institute scientist identifies pivotal cellular protein underlying eczemaDiscovery opens new therapeutic avenue for chronic skin condition affecting millions