Department of Human Genetics, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine and the Committee on Immunology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Curr Opin Immunol. 2017 Oct;48:51-60. doi: 10.1016/j.coi.2017.08.003. Epub 2017 Aug 29.
Children who grow up in traditional farm environments are protected from developing asthma and allergy. This 'farm effect' can be largely explained by the child's early life contact with farm animals, in particular cows, and their microbes. Our studies in Amish and Hutterite school children living on farms in the U.S. have further demonstrated that this protection is mediated through innate immune pathways. Although very similar with respect to ancestry and many lifestyle factors that are associated with asthma risk, Amish and Hutterites follow farming practices that are associated with profound differences in the levels of house dust endotoxin, in the prevalence of asthma and atopy among school children, and in the proportions, phenotypes, and functions of immune cells from these children. In this review, we will consider our studies in Amish and Hutterites children in the context of the many previous studies in European farm children and discuss how these studies have advanced our understanding of the asthma-protective 'farm effect'.
在传统农场环境中长大的儿童不易患哮喘和过敏。这种“农场效应”可以很大程度上归因于儿童早期与农场动物(尤其是奶牛)及其微生物的接触。我们在美国对阿米什和哈特派农场儿童的研究进一步表明,这种保护是通过先天免疫途径介导的。尽管在与哮喘风险相关的遗传背景和许多生活方式因素方面非常相似,但阿米什人和哈特派遵循的农业实践与室内灰尘内毒素水平、儿童哮喘和过敏的流行率以及这些儿童的免疫细胞比例、表型和功能存在显著差异。在这篇综述中,我们将结合之前在欧洲农场儿童中进行的许多研究来讨论我们在阿米什和哈特派儿童中的研究,并讨论这些研究如何增进我们对具有哮喘保护作用的“农场效应”的理解。