1. Environmental biodiversity, human microbiota, and allergy are interrelated.
- Author
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Hanski I, von Hertzen L, Fyhrquist N, Koskinen K, Torppa K, Laatikainen T, Karisola P, Auvinen P, Paulin L, Mäkelä MJ, Vartiainen E, Kosunen TU, Alenius H, and Haahtela T
- Subjects
- Acinetobacter immunology, Adolescent, Alphaproteobacteria immunology, Bacillus immunology, Betaproteobacteria immunology, Civilization, Clostridium immunology, Environmental Exposure, Finland epidemiology, Gammaproteobacteria immunology, Humans, Hypersensitivity epidemiology, Logistic Models, Prevalence, Random Allocation, Skin immunology, Skin microbiology, Biodiversity, Hygiene Hypothesis, Hypersensitivity immunology, Hypersensitivity microbiology, Metagenome immunology
- Abstract
Rapidly declining biodiversity may be a contributing factor to another global megatrend--the rapidly increasing prevalence of allergies and other chronic inflammatory diseases among urban populations worldwide. According to the "biodiversity hypothesis," reduced contact of people with natural environmental features and biodiversity may adversely affect the human commensal microbiota and its immunomodulatory capacity. Analyzing atopic sensitization (i.e., allergic disposition) in a random sample of adolescents living in a heterogeneous region of 100 × 150 km, we show that environmental biodiversity in the surroundings of the study subjects' homes influenced the composition of the bacterial classes on their skin. Compared with healthy individuals, atopic individuals had lower environmental biodiversity in the surroundings of their homes and significantly lower generic diversity of gammaproteobacteria on their skin. The functional role of the gram-negative gammaproteobacteria is supported by in vitro measurements of expression of IL-10, a key anti-inflammatory cytokine in immunologic tolerance, in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. In healthy, but not in atopic, individuals, IL-10 expression was positively correlated with the abundance of the gammaproteobacterial genus Acinetobacter on the skin. These results raise fundamental questions about the consequences of biodiversity loss for both allergic conditions and public health in general.
- Published
- 2012
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