4.6 Article

Rural and urban exposures shape early life immune development in South African children with atopic dermatitis and nonallergic children

Journal

ALLERGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/all.15832

Keywords

atopic dermatitis; children; environment; immune development; transcriptomics

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The study found that children with atopic dermatitis have a distinct gene expression pattern in their peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Early life exposures, including animals, time outdoors, and types of cooking and heating fuels, have the most significant effects on the immune cell transcriptome. Differences in gene expression patterns were also observed between rural and urban areas.
Background: Immunological traits and functions have been consistently associated with environmental exposures and are thought to shape allergic disease susceptibility and protection. In particular, specific exposures in early life may have more significant effects on the developing immune system, with potentially long-term impacts.Methods: We performed RNA-Seq on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 150 children with atopic dermatitis and healthy nonallergic children in rural and urban settings from the same ethnolinguistic AmaXhosa background in South Africa. We measured environmental exposures using questionnaires.Results: A distinct PBMC gene expression pattern was observed in those children with atopic dermatitis (132 differentially expressed genes [DEGs]). However, the predominant influences on the immune cell transcriptome were related to early life exposures including animals, time outdoors, and types of cooking and heating fuels. Sample clustering revealed two rural groups (Rural_1 and Rural_2) that separated from the urban group (3413 and 2647 DEGs, respectively). The most significantly regulated pathways in Rural_1 children were related to innate activation of the immune system (e.g., TLR and cytokine signaling), changes in lymphocyte polarization (e.g., TH17 cells), and immune cell metabolism (i.e., oxidative phosphorylation). The Rural_2 group displayed evidence for ongoing lymphocyte activation (e.g., T cell receptor signaling), with changes in immune cell survival and proliferation (e.g., mTOR signaling, insulin signaling).Conclusions: This study highlights the importance of the exposome on immune development in early life and identifies potentially protective (e.g., animal) exposures and potentially detrimental (e.g., pollutant) exposures that impact key immunological pathways.

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