Schistosoma mansoni-specific immune responses and allergy in Uganda

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Abstract

Low allergy-related disease (ARD) prevalence in low-income countries may be partly attributed to helminth infections. In the Schistosoma mansoni (Sm)-endemic Lake Victoria islands (Uganda), we recently observed positive helminth-allergy associations, despite low ARD prevalence. To understand how Sm-induced cytokine and antibody profiles might influence allergic response profiles in this population, we assessed Schistosoma worm (SWA)- and egg antigen (SEA)-specific Th1 (IFN-γ), Th2 (IL-5, IL-13) and regulatory (IL-10) cytokine profiles (n = 407), and total (n = 471), SWA-, SEA- and allergen (house dust mite [HDM] and cockroach)-specific (as)IgE and IgG4 profiles (n = 2117) by ELISA. Wheeze was inversely associated with SWA-specific IFN-γ (P

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Nkurunungi, G., Kabagenyi, J., Nampijja, M., Sanya, R. E., Walusimbi, B., Nassuuna, J., … Elliott, A. (2018). Schistosoma mansoni-specific immune responses and allergy in Uganda. Parasite Immunology, 40(1). https://doi.org/10.1111/pim.12506

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