Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Exposure to dirt in childhood promotes immunity

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The concept of exposing infants to germs in order to build up immunity is known as the hygiene hypothesis. Now, researcher­s of Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) have come up with evidence supporting the hygiene hypothesis for the first time.

They studied the immune system of ‘germfree mice’ and compared them to mice living in a normal environmen­t with microbes, the journal Science reported.

They found that ‘germfree mice’ had exaggerate­d inflammati­on of the lungs and colon resembling asthma and colitis,

Moreover,the protection provided by early-life exposure to microbes was long-lasting,as predicted by the hygiene hypothesis.“these studies show the critical importance of proper immune conditioni­ng by microbes

respective­ly, caused by the hyperactiv­ity of a unique class of T cells (immune cells).

These immune cells had been previously linked to these disorders in both mice and humans, said a university statement.

Most importantl­y, researcher­s discovered that exposing the germ-free mice to microbes during their first weeks of life, but not when exposed later in adult life, led to a normalized immune system and prevention of diseases.

Moreover, the protection provided by early-life exposure to microbes was long-lasting, as predicted by the hygiene hypothesis.

“These studies show the critical importance of proper immune conditioni­ng by microbes during the earliest periods of life,” said Richard Blumberg, chief for the BWH Division of Gastroente­rology, Hepatology and Endoscopy, and study co-author, working with Dennis Kasper, director of BWH’S Channing Lab.

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