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  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Microbe exposure may not protect against developing allergic disease

    The "hygiene hypothesis" suggests exposure to diverse types of microbes may protect against developing diseases caused by allergens, but a new study in mice reveals that adults' exposure to diverse microbes and allergens may in fact worsen certain allergic conditions.
    Exposure to diverse microbes in adulthood can worsen allergic airway inflammation in mice, challenging the idea that microbial exposure always protects against allergic diseases. The protective or aggravating effect of microbial exposure appears to depend on the timing and life stage, with early-life exposure potentially offering more benefit than adult exposure.
    Data suggests that it's important to think about how we go through the world and protect ourselves from exposure to microbes, because depending on your condition, if you're moving from a clean to a dirty environment, or dirty to clean environment, you might have a different response in terms of developing allergic disease.
    The "hygiene hypothesis" posits that exposure to a diverse array of microbes protects against allergic-type diseases, according to the paper. For example, the hypothesis would suggest that growing up on a farm or in less-clean environments protects against allergic responses. Published epidemiological and experimental data have provided strong support for this hypothesis. However, the current study finds that such protection may be nuanced and could depend on life stage and timing of exposure.

    The critical question is, where's that break point between when exposure to a broad diversity of antigens is protective and when it may aggravate?
    In their experiments, the researchers found that exposure to microbes as adults worsened the development of allergic airway inflammation compared to newborns exposed to these microbes.

    Jessica Elmore et al, Diverse microbial exposure exacerbates the development of allergic airway inflammation in adult mice, The Journal of Immunology (2026). DOI: 10.1093/jimmun/vkaf331

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Pollution, noise and climate stress all pose a serious threat to heart health
    Environmental stressors such as air pollution, noise, chemical exposure, and climate-related factors significantly increase cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, contributing to over 13 million deaths annually. These factors interact through shared biological pathways and disproportionately affect vulnerable populations. Integrating environmental risks into CVD prevention is essential for effective public health strategies.
    For decades, cardiologists have developed treatments and prevention measures that focus solely on the individual: controlling blood pressure, lowering cholesterol, quitting smoking, and so on. Environment is also a key determinant of CVD risk, but it has been persistently overlooked. Environmental risk factors are estimated to contribute to more than 13 million deaths annually, exceeding the burden of many well-established risk factors.
    According to the World Health Organization, 99% of the world's population breathes air that exceeds its recommended pollution levels. But air pollution is not the only risk factor—chronic exposure to noise, nighttime light pollution, chemical pollutants, poor water and soil quality, and the increasingly frequent impacts of climate change such as heat waves and fires all play a fundamental role in heart health.
    The combined impacts of environmental factors accumulate over the years, affecting our overall cardiovascular health. The joint article by the cardiology societies emphasizes that these factors do not act in isolation—they interact through shared biological pathways such as inflammation and oxidative stress.
    Reducing pollution, noise and urban heat is therefore not just a matter of ecology—it literally prevents heart disease.

    https://www.ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.125.079034

  • Dr. Krishna Kumari Challa

    Chemists shed light on how age-related cataracts may begin
    A specific oxidative modification in the γS-crystallin protein of the eye lens increases its tendency to aggregate under stress, even though the protein remains structurally stable. This subtle chemical change, which accumulates with age and environmental exposure, may initiate cataract formation by promoting protein clumping and impairing lens transparency.
    The research, published in Biophysical Reports, focuses on proteins called crystallins, which help keep the eye lens clear. These proteins are meant to last a lifetime. But unlike most cells in the body, the lens cannot replace damaged proteins, so chemical changes can gradually accumulate over decades.
    The protein can still look mostly normal, but even a small chemical change makes it much more likely to stick to other proteins.

    Yeonseong Seo et al, Mimicking oxidative damage in γS-crystallin with site-specific incorporation of 5-hydroxytryptophan, Biophysical Reports (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.bpr.2026.100251