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Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age

Atopic dermatitis is a highly complex multifactorial inflammatory skin disease that disproportionately affects children and has increased rapidly during recent years in South Africa. Current data suggest that the changing diversity of environmental exposures, diet, and lifestyle factors across Afric...

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Main Author: Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
Other Authors: Maitin, Thabi
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Medicine 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
author2 Maitin, Thabi
author_browse Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
Maitin, Thabi
author_facet Maitin, Thabi
Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
author_sort Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
collection Thesis
description Atopic dermatitis is a highly complex multifactorial inflammatory skin disease that disproportionately affects children and has increased rapidly during recent years in South Africa. Current data suggest that the changing diversity of environmental exposures, diet, and lifestyle factors across African societies might provide unique disease promoting effects in populations where a low risk of developing AD and allergic disease was previously documented. To identify novel immunological endotypes and responsible environmental exposures in South African children with AD, we collected data on environmental exposures, lifestyle factors, and conducted clinical assessments in 217 children (Urban AD, n=56; Rural AD, n=60; Urban Healthy Controls, n=49; Rural Healthy Controls, n=52). Detailed immunological analysis (cell counts, cytokine levels, serology and RNA-Seq) were performed on 152 of these children. Participants were from the same ethno-linguistic AmaXhosa background. Strong evidence for persistent TH2 responses (elevated circulating eosinophils, allergen-specific IgE, TARC, MCP-4, and IL-16 levels) with reduced TH17 responses (IL-17A and IL-23 levels) were seen in South African children with AD regardless of whether they lived in urban or rural communities. However, independent of AD, a vast array of circulating immune mediators (including proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, soluble adhesion molecules and growth factors) were associated with early life nutrition, medications, animal exposures, indoor environment, sunlight exposure and household size. RNA sequencing of peripheral blood mononuclear cells corroborated the TH2 cytokine profile identified. Furthermore, multiple immunological pathways (including immunoregulatory factors, aryl hydrocarbon receptor and G protein-coupled receptors) were discovered to be differentially expressed in rural and urban children, regardless of atopic status. The study results address knowledge gaps on the immune interactions between atopic dermatitis and environmental exposures in South African children and clarify population-specific AD endotypes. Overall, protective exposures (e.g., animal) and potentially detrimental (e.g., pollutant) exposures shape the early life innate and adaptive immune response. Lastly, when immune-mediated disorders do occur in children, living environment is worth considering and its effects on background immune profile that can potentially interact with immune-targeting therapies and consequently impact treatment efficacy.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41023 Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age Lunjani, Nonhlanhla Maitin, Thabi Medicine Atopic dermatitis is a highly complex multifactorial inflammatory skin disease that disproportionately affects children and has increased rapidly during recent years in South Africa. Current data suggest that the changing diversity of environmental exposures, diet, and lifestyle factors across African societies might provide unique disease promoting effects in populations where a low risk of developing AD and allergic disease was previously documented. To identify novel immunological endotypes and responsible environmental exposures in South African children with AD, we collected data on environmental exposures, lifestyle factors, and conducted clinical assessments in 217 children (Urban AD, n=56; Rural AD, n=60; Urban Healthy Controls, n=49; Rural Healthy Controls, n=52). Detailed immunological analysis (cell counts, cytokine levels, serology and RNA-Seq) were performed on 152 of these children. Participants were from the same ethno-linguistic AmaXhosa background. Strong evidence for persistent TH2 responses (elevated circulating eosinophils, allergen-specific IgE, TARC, MCP-4, and IL-16 levels) with reduced TH17 responses (IL-17A and IL-23 levels) were seen in South African children with AD regardless of whether they lived in urban or rural communities. However, independent of AD, a vast array of circulating immune mediators (including proinflammatory cytokines, chemokines, soluble adhesion molecules and growth factors) were associated with early life nutrition, medications, animal exposures, indoor environment, sunlight exposure and household size. RNA sequencing of peripheral blood mononuclear cells corroborated the TH2 cytokine profile identified. Furthermore, multiple immunological pathways (including immunoregulatory factors, aryl hydrocarbon receptor and G protein-coupled receptors) were discovered to be differentially expressed in rural and urban children, regardless of atopic status. The study results address knowledge gaps on the immune interactions between atopic dermatitis and environmental exposures in South African children and clarify population-specific AD endotypes. Overall, protective exposures (e.g., animal) and potentially detrimental (e.g., pollutant) exposures shape the early life innate and adaptive immune response. Lastly, when immune-mediated disorders do occur in children, living environment is worth considering and its effects on background immune profile that can potentially interact with immune-targeting therapies and consequently impact treatment efficacy. 2025-02-25T13:41:00Z 2025-02-25T13:41:00Z 2024 2025-02-25T13:37:28Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41023 eng application/pdf Department of Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Medicine
Lunjani, Nonhlanhla
Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
title_full Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
title_fullStr Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
title_full_unstemmed Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
title_short Mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in African (AmaXhosa) children between 12-36 months of age
title_sort mechanisms of atopic dermatitis and allergy development in african amaxhosa children between 12 36 months of age
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41023
work_keys_str_mv AT lunjaninonhlanhla mechanismsofatopicdermatitisandallergydevelopmentinafricanamaxhosachildrenbetween1236monthsofage