Switch to an accessible version of this website which is easier to read. (requires cookies)

Gene find boosts allergy research

December 27, 2007 12:00 AM

Gene-targeting therapies could one day offer relief from allergies such as hayfever, say UK and Swiss scientists. A gene called "GATA-3" can stop the body's immune system from working properly when it meets potential allergens, they say.

The journal PLoS Biology reports that mice with dominant GATA-3 didn't produce enough key immune cells to prevent allergy attacks. A treatment may still be some years away, allergy specialists have warned.

In most people, coming into contact with pollen, animal hair or nuts causes no reaction because their immune systems recognise them as harmless. However, in allergy sufferers, the immune system becomes programmed to see them as a threat, launching an attack which causes inflammation, wheezing or rashes.

Scientists have spent many years looking at why and how the body responds this way. One of the most important discoveries was the "regulatory T-cell", which appears to have some beneficial control on the scale and direction of unwanted immune system attacks.

The latest find, from Imperial College London and the Swiss Institute of Allergy and Asthma Research in Davos, has revealed more about the genes important to the production of regulatory T-cells. Activity in two different genes appears to be crucial - the FOXP3 gene which helps make the cells, and the GATA-3 gene, which, when over-active, blocks FOXP3.

They used mice engineered to "over-express" GATA-3 to test this theory, and found that regulatory T-cell numbers were much lower.

Dr Carsten Schmidt-Weber, the lead investigator on the research from Imperial's National Heart and Lung Institute, said: "This finding will help us to understand how healthy individuals are able to tolerate allergens and what we need to do to re-induce tolerance in the immune systems of patients with allergies."

Although allergy is known to be inherited in many cases - suggesting that genes are involved - the huge rise in the number and severity of allergies reported to doctors in recent decades is also thought to be due to other, environmental factors. Some estimates suggest that the number of people in the UK with some form of allergy is at least 18 million.

A spokesman for the charity Allergy UK warned that the latest gene find would not lead immediately to useful treatments. "All research is useful and interesting but a cure for allergy and indeed the sort of treatment that could direct the T-cells to avoid allergy is many years down the line."

What would you like to do next?

  • Subscribe for updates

    Read updates from this website in your desktop or online news reader

    • On a news reader website

      •  
      •  
      •  

      In a desktop news reader or a website not listed above

      •  
    • Example monthly digest email
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image

    Join our email list

    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image

    Follow the party's activity on...

  • Share this page

    Share this page on another website

    Link to this page

    On websites and printed material:
    disabilitylibdems.org.uk/en/article/2007/102914/gene-find-boosts-allergy-research
    In text messages, Twitter, or reading over the phone:
    da.lib.dm/a44qm

    Email this page to a friend


    • Generate different image
  • Help out or donate

    Help out in your local area

      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
      •  
    • If you submit your contact details, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting


    • Generate different image
  • Tell us what you think

    Send us your views

    • If you agree, the Liberal Democrats and their elected representatives may use the information you provide to contact you about issues you may find of interest. Some of the contacts may be automated. You can opt out of these contacts at any time by contacting us.


    • Generate different image