The Asian Age

Genetics, pollution raise asthma symptoms

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Washington: A recent research has found how genetics and pollution drive severity of asthma symptoms. Researcher­s at the National Institutes of Health found that asthma patients, with a specific genetic profile, exhibit more intense symptoms following exposure to traffic pollution. The research team also found that asthma patients that lack this genetic profile do not have the same sensitivit­y to traffic pollution and do not experience severe asthmasymp­toms. Co- lead author Shepherd Schurman stated that the results were based on genetic variation, the subtle difference­s in DNA that make each person unique. He further said 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.” The researcher­s 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. The researcher­s found that asthma sufferers who were hyper- responders and lived closer to heavily travelled roads had the worst asthma symptoms, such as chest pain, cough, and wheezing, compared to the other groups. — ANI

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