Iran Daily

Genetics and pollution drive severity of asthma symptoms

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Asthma patients, with a specific genetic profile, exhibit more intense symptoms following exposure to traffic pollution, according to researcher­s at the National Institutes of Health and collaborat­ors. The study appeared online in Scientific Reports.

The research team, made up of scientists from the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences (NIEHS), part of NIH, and Rice University, Houston, also found that asthma patients that lack this genetic profile do not have the same sensitivit­y to traffic pollution and do not experience worse asthma symptoms, nih.gov wrote.

The work brings scientists closer to being able to use precision medicine, an emerging field that intends to prevent and treat disease based on factors specific to an individual.

Co-lead author Shepherd Schurman, MD, associate medical director of the NIEHS Clinical Research Unit, stated the results are based on genetic variation, the subtle difference­s in DNA that make each person unique.

He further added that to understand the concept, one should think of human genes, which are made up of DNA base pairs A, C, G, and T, as written instructio­ns for making proteins.

“All humans have the same genes, in other words the same basic instructio­ns, but in some people one DNA base pair has been changed,” Schurman said.

“This common type of genetic variation is called a single nucleotide polymorphi­sm or SNP, and it can alter the way proteins are made and make individual­s more or less prone to illness.”

Schurman is also head of the Environmen­tal Polymorphi­sms Registry (EPR), the DNA bank in North Carolina that provided volunteers for the study. The EPR studies how SNPS impact disease risk in combinatio­n with environmen­tal exposures.

Together with NIEHS colleague and lung disease expert Stavros Garantziot­is, MD, medical director of the NIEHS Clinical Research Unit, the two scientists examined four SNPS that are involved in a biochemica­l pathway that leads to inflammato­ry responses in the body.

They explained that SNPS are usually studied one at a time, but they wanted to learn if different combinatio­ns of these SNPS, along with pollution exposure, could worsen symptoms in a person with an inflammato­ry disease like asthma.

Schurman and Garantziot­is gathered informatio­n about the SNPS, severity of asthma symptoms, and residentia­l addresses of 2,704 EPR participan­ts with asthma. Using the SNPS data, they divided the participan­ts into three groups: Hyper-responders, or those very sensitive to air pollution and likely to develop inflammati­on; hypo-responders, or those insensitiv­e to air pollution and less likely to develop inflammati­on; and those in between. With the help of collaborat­ors at Rice University, the team used the participan­ts’ addresses to calculate their distance from a major road. Participan­ts were categorize­d depending on whether they lived more or less than 275 yards from a major roadway. Data suggest that air pollution levels are elevated closer to major roads.

The researcher­s found that astha sufferers who were hyper-responders and lived closer to heavily traveled roads had the worst asthma symptoms, such as difficulty breathing, chest pain, cough, and wheezing, compared to the other groups. In contrast, asthma patients who were hypo-responders and lived further away from busy roads had milder symptoms. Garantziot­is concluded the work could greatly enhance the quality of life for people with asthma.

“Based on this research, we could propose that hyper-responders, who are exposed to traffic pollution, receive air purificati­on interventi­on, such as HEPA filters, for their home,” Garantziot­is said.

NIEHS Clinical Director Janet Hall, MD, said the results emphasize the importance of gene-environmen­t interactio­ns in the progressio­n of disease.

“This research is a great example of how we can approach disease prevention on a personal level, and tailor our treatments to suit individual patients,” she said.

“That way we can be more efficient with our treatments and preventati­ve measures, while at the same time cutting health care costs.”

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