Division of Immunology and South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC) Immunology of Infectious Diseases, Department of Pathology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Cape Town, South Africa.
Front Immunol. 2019 Nov 20;10:2696. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02696. eCollection 2019.
Asthma is a chronic debilitating airway disease affecting millions of people worldwide. Although largely thought to be a disease of the first world, it is now clear that it is on the rise in many middle- and lower-income countries. The disease is complex, and its etiology is poorly understood, which explains failure of most treatment strategies. We know that in children, asthma is closely linked to poor lung function in the first 3-years of life, when the lung is still undergoing post-natal alveolarization phase. Epidemiological studies also suggest that environmental factors around that age do play a critical part in the establishment of early wheezing which persists until adulthood. Some of the factors that contribute to early development of asthma in children in Western world are clear, however, in low- to middle-income countries this is likely to differ significantly. The contribution of fungal species in the development of allergic diseases is known in adults and in experimental models. However, it is unclear whether early exposure during perinatal or post-natal lung development influences a protective or promotes allergic asthma. Host immune cells and responses will play a crucial part in early development of allergic asthma. How immune cells and their receptors may recognize fungi and promote allergic asthma or protect by tolerance among other immune mechanisms is not fully understood in this early lung development stage. The aim of this review is to discuss what fungal species are present during early exposure as well as their contribution to the development of allergic responses. We also discuss how the host has evolved to promote tolerance to limit hyper-responsiveness to innocuous fungi, and how host evasion by fungi during early development consequentially results in allergic diseases.
哮喘是一种影响全球数百万人的慢性衰弱性气道疾病。尽管它主要被认为是一种发达国家的疾病,但现在很明显,它在许多中低收入国家的发病率正在上升。这种疾病很复杂,其病因尚不清楚,这也解释了大多数治疗策略的失败。我们知道,在儿童中,哮喘与生命前 3 年的肺功能不良密切相关,此时肺仍在经历出生后肺泡化阶段。流行病学研究还表明,在那个年龄段左右的环境因素在早期喘息的建立中起着至关重要的作用,这种喘息会持续到成年。在西方世界,导致儿童早期哮喘发展的一些因素是明确的,然而,在低收入和中等收入国家,情况可能大不相同。真菌物种在成人和实验模型中对过敏性疾病的发展有贡献是已知的。然而,在围产期或出生后肺部发育过程中早期暴露是否会影响保护性或促进过敏性哮喘尚不清楚。宿主免疫细胞和反应将在过敏性哮喘的早期发展中发挥关键作用。在这个早期肺发育阶段,免疫细胞及其受体如何识别真菌并促进过敏性哮喘或通过其他免疫机制耐受还不完全清楚。本综述的目的是讨论在早期暴露期间存在哪些真菌物种以及它们对过敏反应发展的贡献。我们还讨论了宿主如何进化以促进耐受,从而限制对无害真菌的过度反应,以及宿主在早期发育过程中如何被真菌逃避,从而导致过敏性疾病。