PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Johns Hopkins researchers turn off severe food allergies in mice

New study suggests immune system can be trained to tolerate peanuts, milk, more

2010-10-02
(Press-News.org) Johns Hopkins Medicine Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered a way to turn off the immune system's allergic reaction to certain food proteins in mice, a discovery that could have implications for the millions of people who suffer severe reactions to foods, such as peanuts and milk.

The findings, published online in the journal Nature Medicine, provide hope that the body could be trained to tolerate food allergies that lead to roughly 300,000 emergency room visits and 100 to 200 deaths each year.

The research team, led by Shau-Ku Huang, Ph.D., a professor of medicine, and Yufeng Zhou, M.D., Ph.D., a postdoctoral fellow in the Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, discovered that one kind of immune cell in the gastrointestinal tract called lamina propria dendritic cells (LPDC) — considered the first line of defense for a body's immune system — expresses a special receptor, SIGNR1, which appears on the cells' surface and binds to specific sugars.

By targeting this receptor using sugar-modified protein, researchers were able to keep food proteins that would have induced a severe, even deadly, allergic reaction from causing any serious harm.

"There is no cure for food allergies, and the primary treatment is avoidance of the offending protein," Zhou says. "This could teach our bodies to create a new immune response and we would no longer be allergic to the protein."

The researchers hope to confirm whether this promising process in mice can also occur in people.

Food allergies are triggered by the immune system and, in some people, can cause severe symptoms or even a life-threatening reaction known as anaphylaxis. In the United States, it is estimated that six to eight percent of children under the age of three and nearly four percent of adults have food allergies, and the prevalence is rising. Because of the extreme difficulty in avoiding all food allergen exposure and the lack of effective treatments, preventive and therapeutic strategies are urgently needed, Zhou says.

In the laboratory, Zhou and his colleagues took a food protein that causes allergies in mice and modified it by adding special sugars. They hypothesized that, when ingested by the mice, the modified proteins would be able to bind to what are known as the SIGNR1 receptors on the immune system cells. Bound in this way, the immune system would learn to tolerate the modified food protein — and the protein would no longer induce an allergic reaction, even when consumed in its unmodified form.

Zhou fed his mice the modified protein once a day for three days. Five days later, he tested them by feeding them the protein in its unmodified form. Another group of mice was not fed the modified protein at all. The severity of the allergic response to the unmodified protein — which in the control-group mice tended to be tremors, convulsions and/or death — was significantly decreased in those mice that had been pre-fed the modified protein. Some still had minor reactions like itchiness or puffiness around the eyes and snout, but none had serious ones. These mice appeared to be desensitized to the food protein, even when it was fed to them in its unmodified form, says Zhou. In this model, SIGNR1 plays a key role in shutting off some responses in the immune cells, but whether this is the only function of this receptor is, at present, unknown.

### Other Johns Hopkins researchers on the study include Hirokazu Kawasaki, Shih-Chang Hsu, Reiko T. Lee, Xu Yao, Beverly Plunkett, Jinrong Fu and Yuan C. Lee.

On the web: http://www.nature.com/nm/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nm.2201.html

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Lifestyle intervention improves risk factors in type 2 diabetes

2010-10-02
An intensive lifestyle intervention program designed to achieve and maintain weight loss improves diabetes control and cardiovascular disease risk factors in overweight and obese individuals with type 2 diabetes, according to four-year results of the Look AHEAD study, funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The results are published in the Sept. 27, 2010, issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine. Look AHEAD (Action for Health in Diabetes) is a multi-center, randomized clinical trial investigating the effects of ...

Break the Boredom of Holiday Gift Shopping with the Karuna Karma Kit

2010-10-02
Every holiday season shoppers eagerly queue up to buy gifts that are sure to please. This year, Karuna Skin, LLC, a privately held luxury skin care company in Los Angeles, recently launched an exceptional gift called the Karma Kit, a premium collection of its four best-selling Karuna masks including the hydrating mask, anti-oxidant mask, exfoliating mask and anti-aging mask. Karuna, which is the first skincare company to develop a high-quality, one-step, no-mess, no-rinse, do-it-yourself facial that is individually wrapped, developed the Karma Kit as a natural extension ...

Jane Out of the Box Expert Unveils Top 5 Reasons Planning is Important in Business

2010-10-02
Women business owners everywhere have likely spent countless hours working on their companies' business plans. Whether they have planned for growth, new products or hiring a team, it's impossible not to think about the future. Why is planning so important? Myriad answers exist - but in narrowing them down, five main reasons prevail. Why Plan? The Top 5 Reasons Female Entrepreneurs Must Plan is the latest article by entrepreneurial expert Michele DeKinder-Smith. In this article, she unveils the top five reasons a woman business owner should plan for her company's future ...

Phillip Hare of ByteWyze Computer Services Raises Over $1,000 Multiple Sclerosis

2010-10-02
Phillip Hare of ByteWyze Computer Services recently participated in Bike MS: Historic New Bern Ride 2010 to raise funds to support people living with multiple sclerosis in Eastern North Carolina and throughout the United States. The event attracted over 2,300 cyclists and was held on Saturday, September 11 and Sunday, September 12. It offered cyclists a choice to ride 30, 50, 75, or 100 miles on fully-supported routes. Due to inclement weather, both the 30- and 100-mile routes were closed on Sunday. Multiple sclerosis (or MS) is a chronic, often disabling disease that ...

eLove captures Cupid and #1 matchmaker in coast-to-coast connection.

2010-10-02
eLove, the fastest growing matchmaking firm in the country, recently acquired Cupid's Coach, a Los Angeles-based matchmaking company. The addition of Cupid Coach's two locations in Los Angeles and Westlake Village brings eLove's total number of matchmaking offices to 50 nationwide. "We're positively thrilled with the addition of Cupid's Coach for many reasons," said Paul A. Falzone, CEO of eLove. "Besides giving us a presence in a large market like LA, it gives us the opportunity to add one of the great matchmakers in the business today, Julie Ferman." As the principal ...

Logos 4 Mac ships today

2010-10-02
Logos Bible Software announced today its full release of Logos 4 Mac, underscoring its commitment to making the best Bible study resources accessible across multiple platforms. "We want to make great Bible study tools available everywhere," said Bob Pritchett, president of Logos Bible Software. "Your investment in Logos Bible Software is about the content and tools; it shouldn't matter what platform or technology you use or switch to in the future." Released on the heels of Biblia.com, and the iPhone and iPad apps, Logos 4 Mac provides the latest way for users to access ...

Old-fashiond country auction is slated for Oct. 15-16 in Fountain, Fla., near Panama City Beach

2010-10-02
A good old-fashioned on-site country sale, featuring over 800 lots in just about every category imaginable, will be held Oct. 15-16 at the home of Maryland Cress, a lifelong collector, at 11421 Ivydell Road in Fountain. The auction will be held by Specialists of the South, Inc., of Panama City, Fla. Online bidding will be facilitated by LiveAuctioneers.com. Fountain is located in the Florida panhandle, south of Interstate 10 and about halfway between Tallahassee and Pensacola. It's 28 miles northeast of Panama City. It will be well worth the drive for fans of country ...

Fearless PR announces Pop/R&B Recording artist Jazmin Fekete's debut single "Bad for Me" available digitally October 19th.

2010-10-02
America is about to have a new sweetheart. NVE Records newest talent Jazmin Fekete's debut album "Grown" is set for release in January 2011 with her first single 'Bad for Me' hitting airwaves and iTunes October 19th. 'Bad for Me' written by Fekete is based off of a personal experience she went through. "What inspired me to write the song was the relationship I was in at the time. We all go through that relationship where you are so infatuated with a person, it consumes you, and they make you weak in the knees, but it feels too good to be true and can be addicting" said ...

Caribbean Wedding and Event Planner Company Announces Sweepstakes

2010-10-02
Recently Keya's Exquisite Touch owners decided to provide a unique and unusual opportunity to give back to the couples who were choosing to use their wedding event planning services. They announced that Keya's Exquisite Touch has decided to offer couples, a special Sweepstakes - available only to couples who are getting married through their incredible Wedding Event Planning services. The concept of the Sweepstakes is simple - Provide something special and memorable for the winning couple. Keya's Exquisite Touch decided to reward one special couple for doing something ...

New Workout Kits From Shape Magazine And Fitness Em Support The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF)

2010-10-02
Fitness EM and SHAPE Magazine continue to expand their line of dedicated products designed to meet the fitness training needs of today's women. The latest addition in the product series was inspired by the SHAPE Pilates for Pink fundraising event and includes the Limited Edition Pilates/yoga mat, the Pilates Home Workout Kit, and the Pilates Body Shaping Kit. Sales of these products will contribute towards Fitness EM's $10,000 donation to The Breast Cancer Research Foundation. The Pilates for Pink workout kits feature home exercise tools designed to improve body tone, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Laser solid-phase synthesis of graphene shell-encapsulated high-entropy alloy nanoparticles

New catalyst breakthrough: Improving oxygen reduction reaction with dual nitrogen sources

Protein shakeup: Researchers uncover new function of a protein that may unlock age-related illnesses

UMD-led study could ‘pave the way’ for improved treatment of premature aging disease

How chain IVF clinics improve infertility treatment

Study shows that Rett syndrome in females is not just less severe, but different

Big data, real world, multi-state study finds RSV vaccine highly effective in protecting older adults against severe disease, hospitalization and death

Manliness concerns impede forgiveness of coworkers

Better ocean connectivity boosts reef fish populations

Two 2024 Nobel laureates are affiliates of the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole

Ultra-processed foods pose unique dangers for people with type 2 diabetes

When hurricanes hit, online chatter drowns out safety messaging

Study seeks rapid, paper-based test to detect cancer cells in cerebrospinal fluid

Raising happy eaters: Unlocking the secrets of childhood appetite

The Society of Thoracic Surgeons launches two new thoracic surgery risk calculators

FAPESP and CNR plan to launch joint call for proposals in April 2025

Smaller, more specific academic journals have more sway over policy

Medicaid ACOs have not yet improved care for kids with asthma

New study sheds light on lily toxicity in cats; outpatient treatment may be viable option

A new benchmark to recognize the hardest problems in materials science

Why do we love carbs? The origins predate agriculture and maybe even our split from Neanderthals

Key protein for the biosynthesis of defense steroids in solanaceous plants discovered

Global CO2 emissions from forest fires increase by 60%

AI-assisted deliberation can help people with different views find common ground

Special Issue explores factors influencing democratic attitudes, and what’s at stake for science in the U.S. after November election

Extratropical forest fire emissions are increasing as climate changes

A new approach to capturing complex mixtures of organic chemicals in blood, evaluated in pregnant women

Gut instincts: Intestinal nutrient sensors

Catching prey with grappling hooks and cannons

Effects of chemical mixtures: Neurotoxic effects add up

[Press-News.org] Johns Hopkins researchers turn off severe food allergies in mice
New study suggests immune system can be trained to tolerate peanuts, milk, more