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

Bacterial protein in house dust spurs asthma according to NIH study

2012-10-15
(Press-News.org) A bacterial protein in common house dust may worsen allergic responses to indoor allergens, according to research conducted by the National Institutes of Health and Duke University. The finding is the first to document the presence of the protein flagellin in house dust, bolstering the link between allergic asthma and the environment.

Scientists from the NIH's National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and Duke University Medical Center published their findings in people and mice online Oct. 14 in the journal Nature Medicine.

"Most people with asthma have allergic asthma, resulting largely from allergic responses to inhaled substances," said the paper's corresponding author Donald Cook, Ph.D., an NIEHS scientist. His research team began the study to identify environmental factors that amplify the allergic responses. "Although flagellin is not an allergen, it can boost allergic responses to true allergens."

After inhaling house dust, mice that were able to respond to flagellin displayed all of the common symptoms of allergic asthma, including more mucous production, airway obstruction, and airway inflammation. However, mice lacking a gene that detects the presence of flagellin had reduced levels of these symptoms.

"More work will be required to confirm our conclusions, but it's possible that cleaning can reduce the amount of house dust in general, and flagellated bacteria in particular, to reduce the incidence of allergic asthma," Cook said.

In addition to the mouse study, the research team also determined that people with asthma have higher levels of antibodies against flagellin in their blood than do non-asthmatic subjects, which provides more evidence of a link between environmental factors and allergic asthma in humans.

"More than 20 million Americans have asthma, with 4,000 deaths from the disease occurring each year," added Darryl Zeldin, M.D., NIEHS scientific director and paper co-author. "All of these data suggest that flagellin in common house dust can promote allergic asthma by priming allergic responses to common indoor allergens."

### NIEHS supports research to understand the effects of the environment on human health and is part of NIH. For more information on environmental health topics, visit http://www.niehs.nih.gov. Subscribe to one or more of the NIEHS news lists to stay current on NIEHS news, press releases, grant opportunities, training, events, and publications.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIH...Turning Discovery Into Health ® Reference: Wilson RH, Maruoka S, Whitehead GS, Foley JF, Flake GP, Sever ML, Zeldin DC, Kraft M, Garantziotis S, Nakano H, Cook DN. 2012. The Toll-like receptor 5 ligand flagellin promotes asthma by priming allergic responses to indoor allergens. Nat Med; doi:10.1038/nm.2920 [Online 14 October 2012].


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Penn researchers find new way to mimic the color and texture of butterfly wings

Penn researchers find new way to mimic the color and texture of butterfly wings
2012-10-15
PHILADELPHIA — The colors of a butterfly's wings are unusually bright and beautiful and are the result of an unusual trait; the way they reflect light is fundamentally different from how color works most of the time. A team of researchers at the University of Pennsylvania has found a way to generate this kind of "structural color" that has the added benefit of another trait of butterfly wings: super-hydrophobicity, or the ability to strongly repel water. The research was led by Shu Yang, associate professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Penn's ...

WSU finds missing link between mental health disorders and chronic diseases in Iraq war refugees

2012-10-15
DETROIT – Wayne State University School of Medicine researchers may have discovered why people exposed to war are at increased risk to develop chronic problems like heart disease years later. And the culprit that links the two is surprising. Beginning in the mid-2000s, WSU researchers interviewed a random sample of 145 American immigrants who left Iraq before the 1991 Gulf War, and 205 who fled Iraq after the Gulf War began. All were residing in metropolitan Detroit at the time of the study. Study subjects were asked about socio-demographics, pre-migration trauma, how ...

School-wide interventions improve student behavior

2012-10-15
An analysis of a school behavior strategy—known as School-Wide Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports (SWPBIS)—found that these types of programs significantly reduced children's aggressive behaviors and office discipline referrals, as well as improved problems with concentration and emotional regulation. The study, conducted by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, is the first randomized control trial to examine the impact of SWPBIS programs over multiple school years. The results were published October 15 in the journal Pediatrics ...

Companies should use caution when using unpopular puzzle interviews

2012-10-15
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 15, 2012 -- In today's tough job market, more job-seekers could be facing interview questions like this: Why are manholes round? Or how many barbershops are there in San Francisco? New job-hunters need to be prepared for these "puzzle interview" questions, says SF State researcher Chris Wright, even though they may consider them to be unfair or irrelevant. "I always give graduating students two primary suggestions. Expect the unexpected and be aware that you might get an off-the-wall question like this," said Wright, associate professor of psychology ...

Medication beliefs strongly affect individuals' management of chronic diseases, MU expert says

Medication beliefs strongly affect individuals management of chronic diseases, MU expert says
2012-10-15
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Nearly half of patients taking medications for chronic conditions do not strictly follow their prescribed medication regimens. Failure to use medications as directed increases patients' risk for side effects, hospitalizations, reduced quality of life and shortened lifespans. Now, a University of Missouri gerontological nursing expert says patients' poor adherence to prescribed medication regimens is connected to their beliefs about the necessity of prescriptions and concerns about long-term effects and dependency. MU Assistant Professor Todd Ruppar found ...

Higher-dose use of certain statins often best for cholesterol issues

2012-10-15
CORVALLIS, Ore. – A comprehensive new review on how to treat high cholesterol and other blood lipid problems suggests that intensive treatment with high doses of statin drugs is usually the best approach. But some statins work much better for this than others, the review concluded, and additional lipid-lowering medications added to a statin have far less value. And medications, of course, should be considered after first trying diet, weight loss and exercise. The review, published in the Annals of Pharmacotherapy, examined the range of treatment options for "dyslipidemia," ...

Climate negotiations relying on 'dangerous' thresholds to avoid catastrophe will not succeed

2012-10-15
The identified critical threshold for dangerous climate change saying that the increase in global temperature should be below 2 degrees Celsius seems not to have helped the climate negotiations so far. New research from the University of Gothenburg and Columbia University shows that negotiations based on such a threshold fail because its value is determined by Nature and is inherently uncertain. Climate negotiators should therefore focus on other collective strategies. Presenting their results in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Astrid Dannenberg, ...

No fear: Why teens are likelier to take gambles

2012-10-15
A new study by Yale School of Medicine researchers and their colleagues finds that adolescents commonly take more risks than younger children and adults because they are more willing to accept risks when consequences are unknown, rather than because they are attracted to danger, as often assumed. Adolescents have the highest rates of sexually transmitted diseases and criminal behaviors of any age group, and even drive faster than adults. The death and injury rate of adolescents is 200% greater than for their younger peers, according to research cited in the study. Ifat ...

What you hear could depend on what your hands are doing

2012-10-15
NEW ORLEANS, La. —New research links motor skills and perception, specifically as it relates to a second finding—a new understanding of what the left and right brain hemispheres "hear." Georgetown University Medical Center researchers say these findings may eventually point to strategies to help stroke patients recover their language abilities, and to improve speech recognition in children with dyslexia. The study, presented at Neuroscience 2012, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, is the first to match human behavior with left brain/right brain auditory ...

Sitting for protracted periods increases risk of diabetes, heart disease and death – study

2012-10-15
A new study led by the University of Leicester, in association with colleagues at Loughborough University, has discovered that sitting for long periods increases your risk of diabetes, heart disease and death. The study, which combined the results of 18 studies and included a total of 794,577 participants, was led by Dr. Emma Wilmot, a research fellow in the Diabetes Research Group at the University of Leicester. It was done in collaboration with colleagues from the newly established National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Leicester-Loughborough Diet, Lifestyle ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Shared gene signatures and key mechanisms in the progression from liver cirrhosis to acute-on-chronic liver failure

Rural Health Care Outcomes Accelerator extended to 2028

Feeling good about yourself

People with schizophrenia have higher risk of COPD

Sibling-specific aggression in women and girls

Study raises red flags about BPA replacements

The irresistibility of extrapolating from past performance

Predicting nationality from beliefs and values

Mindset shift about catastrophes linked to decreased depression, inflammation

Astronomers make unexpected discovery of planet in formation around a young star

EBMT partners in a new consortium to decentralise CAR-T cell therapy and improve hospital workflow

Primate thumbs and brains evolved hand-in-hand

Sneaky swirls: scientists confirm ‘hidden’ vortices could influence how soil and snow move

Tropical volcanic eruptions push rainfall across the equator

UCLA scientists map primate ovarian reserve development, offering key insights into women’s health

BU study finds type 2 diabetes blood factors drive breast cancer aggression

AI chatbots inconsistent in answering questions about suicide

More efficient and reliable SiC devices for a greener future

Two thirds of reproductive-aged women have at least one modifiable risk factor for birth defects, study reveals

Boosting the neuroglia as a therapeutic strategy for brain disorders

Computational neurogenomics revolution unlocks personalized treatments for brain disorders worldwide

Psychedelics researcher reveals how MDMA and LSD transform human connectedness

Making low-fertility rats fertile by changing the treatment interval

Common painkillers linked to antibiotic resistance

Teachers' depression, anxiety and stress at three times the national norm: new study

Common cold may protect against COVID-19 according to National Jewish Health researchers

New project to improve information retrieval for lifelong learning

New method probes cancer cell messengers that weaken immune system

VCs backed Black founders after BLM – but it didn’t last

A new tool to track infant development, starting at just 16 days old

[Press-News.org] Bacterial protein in house dust spurs asthma according to NIH study