Peanut in house dust linked to allergy
A new study led by researchers at King’s College London in collaboration with the University of Manchester and the University of Dundee has found a strong link between exposure to peanut protein in household dust during infancy and the development of peanut allergy in children genetically predisposed to a skin barrier defect.
Around 2% of school children in the UK and the US are allergic to peanuts. Severe eczema in early infancy has been linked to food allergies, particularly peanut allergy. A major break-through in the understanding of eczema developed with the discovery of the FLG gene which codes for the skin barrier protein filaggrin. Mutations in the FLG gene result in an impaired skin barrier which is thought to allow allergens to penetrate the skin and predispose the body towards an allergic response.
Immunology, looked at the amount of peanut protein children were exposed to in household dust in their first year of life by vacuuming dust from the living room sofa and measuring peanut in the dust. A group of 577 children were assessed at 8 and 11 years of age for peanut allergy and their DNA was checked for FLG mutations. The study was conducted in children recruited to the Manchester Asthma and Allergy Study.
A strong link was found between early-life exposure to peanut protein in household dust and peanut allergy in children with FLG mutations. A three-fold increase in house dust peanut exposure during infancy was associated with a three-fold increase in risk of school-age peanut allergy. One in five children with peanut allergy had an FLG mutation. There was no significant effect of environmental peanut exposure in children without FLG mutations.
Dr Helen A Brough, first author from the Department of Paediatric Allergy, Division of Asthma, Allergy & Lung Biology, King’s College London, said: “Our findings provide evidence that peanut allergy may develop via the skin in children with mutations in the gene that codes for filaggrin which damage the function of this important skin protein. These findings are also an example of how an individual’s response to their environment can be modified by their genes. Our study raises the possibility of being able to identify a group of children with FLG mutations through genetic testing in the future, and altering their environmental exposure to peanut early in life to reduce the risk of developing peanut allergy.” King’s College London