The Leipzig Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research has gained
new insights on the influence of tobacco smoke in utero. For the first
time, it could be demonstrated with smoking pregnant women and their
children, how exposure to tobacco smoke affects the development of human
immune system on molecular level. The focus thereby was on microRNA – a
short, single-stranded RNA molecule that is now recognised as playing
an important role in gene regulation.
For some time now, the impact of environmental stressors during
pregnancy on allergy risk among new-born children is a main research
topic at Leipzig Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research (UFZ). As
part of the long-term study LINA, environmental immunologists from
Leipzig have been focussing on tobacco smoke as an environmental
stressor. The main objective for Dr Gunda Herberth was to reveal the
influence of tobacco smoke on the development of children’s immune
systems – at molecular level. From the results that were recently
published in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, one thing
is certain: “For the first time we were able to describe the effect of
prenatal environmental stressors on the regulation of microRNA.”
Former studies have already proven that smoking during pregnancy can
harm the unborn child: Newborns from smoking mothers have shown low
birth weights and impaired lung functions; later on in life respiratory
diseases, diabetes type II, asthma or cardiovascular diseases were also
more common. However, the exact molecular mechanisms and processes that
are behind such developments still struggle researchers.
For this reason, Dr. Gunda Herberth and Dr. Irina Lehmann from the
UFZ decided to address the relatively recent research area of microRNA.
From the early 1990´s these cell components started to become more and
more of a focus in molecular and cell biology. In the meantime, for
humans more than 1,200 different short, single-stranded RNA molecules
have been named, some of them playing an important role in immune
response. Among others, they have a considerable influence on the
differentiation of regulatory T cells (Treg cells), which in turn
prevent an overactive immune system and thus autoimmune diseases. If
there are insufficient Treg cells or if their function is impaired, the
self-regulatory function of the immune system will be reduced, possibly
resulting in allergies.
To investigate the relationship between smoking mothers during
pregnancy on the one hand and their children´s risk of developing
allergies on the other, the scientists from Leipzig examined
microRNA-223, microRNA-155 and regulatory T cells – not only in the
blood samples of pregnant women (36 weeks pregnant) but also at birth in
the cord blood of their babies. At the same time, questionnaires were
filled out and urine samples of the pregnant women were tested to
substantiate the effect from exposure to tobacco smoke and/or from
volatile organic compounds resulting from smoking. From the pool of
mothers participating in the LINA-study, 315 mothers (6.6 percent of
whom were smokers) and 441 children were consulted in these
investigations.
The focus was on miR-223 and miR-155, because their role in
regulating T cells had already been proven. “What we are now interested
in finding out”, explains Dr. Gunda Herberth , “is whether or not these
microRNAs link exposure to smoke, regulatory T cells and the risk of
developing allergies.”
By measuring the concentration of these microRNAs as well as the
number of regulatory T cells in maternal and cord blood it could be
shown that a high exposure to inhaled volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
associated with tobacco smoke coincides with high values for miR-223. At
the same time it was also found that increased values for maternal and
umbilical cord blood miR-223 correlate with low regulatory T-cell
numbers. Finally, it could be shown that low regulatory T-cell numbers
in umbilical cord blood was an indication that children exposed to
tobacco smoke were more likely to develop an allergy before the age of
three compared to those children with normal values for miR-223 and Treg
cells. Furthermore, the probability of developing eczema was almost
twice as high for these children.
“After already being able to demonstrate the influence of prenatal
smoking on regulatory T-cell numbers in cord blood from our LINA study,
the current epidemiological investigation delves even deeper into
molecular processes”, Dr. Gunda Herberth and Dr. Irina Lehmann resume.
“Now”, the immunologists from Leipzig explicate, “we will know more
about the molecular processes that trigger off stressors from smoke
during pregnancy.” Thus, for the first time the association between
prenatal environmental stressors and the regulation of microRNA is
described. In this respect, the current Helmholtz study opens the door
to further research on the role of microRNA in terms of how the human
immune system reacts to environmental stressors.
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