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Immune cells rush to gut in food allergy. (Science News of the week).


In battling disease, white blood cells White blood cells
A group of several cell types that occur in the bloodstream and are essential for a properly functioning immune system.

Mentioned in: Abscess Incision & Drainage, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Complement Deficiencies
 called eosinophils Eosinophils
A leukocyte with coarse, round granules present.

Mentioned in: Histiocytosis X

eosinophils
 play a supporting role to their better-known immune system immune system

Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders.
 partners, T cells T cells
A type of white blood cell produced in the thymus gland. T cells are an important part of the immune system. Infants born with an underdeveloped or absent thymus do not have a normal level of T cells in their blood.
 and antibodies. Scientists know that eosinophils work diligently against some parasites. Beyond that, their role remains mysterious. This much is clear, however: Eosinophils can make trouble for their host.

Researchers report in the April NATURE IMMUNOLOGY that allergic reactions to food coincide with an accumulation of eosinophils in the small intestine. In a study of mice, the scientists found that such a buildup contributes to intestinal inflammation, damage to nearby nerves, weight loss, and a stoppage of digestion.

The mechanism underlying food allergies is not fully understood. The new findings provide evidence linking eosinophils to "real damage to the gut structure of mice," says study coauthor Eric B. Brandt, an immunologist at Children's Hospital Medical Center in Cincinnati. In people with food allergies, an influx of eosinophils may partly explain the chronic distress they feel after eating, he says.

Brandt and his colleagues induced an allergy to chicken eggs in a group of mice by injecting them with ovalbumin ovalbumin: see albumin; glycoprotein. , an egg protein. Then they fed the mice ovalbumin, placed within coated pill-like beads to prevent the protein's destruction in the stomach. The mice became unable to digest food, a sign that they were suffering a severe allergic reaction. A control group of mice that weren't allergic to ovalbumin showed no signs of distress when fed the beads.

Concentrations of eosinophils in the small intestines of the allergic mice were more than double that in the control mice. Some eosinophils drawn to the site released granules Granules
Small packets of reactive chemicals stored within cells.

Mentioned in: Allergic Rhinitis, Allergies
 that contain toxins, Brandt says. Normally, these would be aimed at parasites or other true adversaries. In this case, the toxins and possibly other immune agents mobilized by the reaction caused inflammation of the intestine.

To move food through the gut, a person must have functioning nerves that signal the intestinal muscles to contract. If present in people with allergies, the kind of intestinal-nerve damage seen in the allergic mice may be responsible for people's pain and digestive problems, Brandt says.

At the heart of the eosinophil eosinophil /eo·sin·o·phil/ (e?o-sin´o-fil) a granular leukocyte having a nucleus with two lobes connected by a thread of chromatin, and cytoplasm containing coarse, round granules of uniform size.  stampede is eotaxin, an immune protein that attracts eosinophils. In allergic reactions induced in the mice, cells in and around the small intestine released excess eotaxin in response to ovalbumin. The concentration of eotaxin within the small intestine of the animals was roughly 4 times that in the controls.

To ascertain the importance of eotaxin in inciting eosinophils to invade the intestine, the scientists performed a separate experiment using mice genetically engineered to lack eotaxin. The researchers first induced ovalbumin allergy both in these mice and in a control group that had normal eotaxin concentrations. When all the mice were fed the ovalbumin beads, significantly fewer eosinophils migrated to the small intestine in the mice lacking eotaxin.

Eotaxin is an immune-signaling molecule called a chemokine chemokine /che·mo·kine/ (ke´mo-kin) any of a group of low molecular weight cytokines identified on the basis of their ability to induce chemotaxis or chemokinesis in leukocytes (or in particular populations of leukocytes) in inflammation. . While most chemokines have backup versions that take their place if they are missing, eotaxin seems to lack such redundancy, says immunologist Kent T. Hayglass of the University of Manitoba Location
The main Fort Garry campus is a complex on the Red River in south Winnipeg. It has an area of 2.74 square kilometres. More than 60 major buildings support the teaching and research programs of the university.
 in Winnipeg.

This uniqueness could make eotaxin a good target for new drugs designed to control food allergies, says allergist al·ler·gist
n.
A physician specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of allergies.


allergist Immunology A physician, who is often trained in both internal medicine and clinical immunology and who manages Pts with
 Donna L. Bratton of the National Jewish Medical Research Center in Denver.
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Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Date:Apr 7, 2001
Words:539
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