Environment, not genes, dictates our immune system

Written By Unknown on Senin, 19 Januari 2015 | 22.10

WASHINGTON: Our environment, more than our heredity, plays the starring role in determining the state of our immune system, the body's primary defence against disease, a new study of twins has shown.

This is especially true as we age, the study indicates.

"The idea in some circles has been that if you sequence someone's genome, you can tell what diseases they're going to have 50 years later," said Mark Davis, from Stanford University's Institute for Immunity, Transplantation and Infection.

But while genomic variation clearly plays a key role in some diseases, he said, the immune system has to be tremendously adaptable in order to cope with unpredictable episodes of infection, injury and tumour formation.

"When you examine people's immune systems, you often find tremendous differences between them. So we wondered whether this reflects underlying genetic differences or something else," said Davis, senior author of the study.

"But what we found was that in most cases, including the reaction to a standard influenza vaccine and other types of immune responsiveness, there is little or no genetic influence at work, and most likely the environment and your exposure to innumerable microbes is the major driver," Davis said.

To determine nature's and nurture's relative contributions, Davis and his colleagues turned to a century-old method of teasing apart environmental and hereditary influences.

They compared pairs of monozygotic twins - best known as "identical" - and of dizygotic, or fraternal, twins.

The researchers recruited 78 monozygotic-twin pairs and 27 pairs of dizygotic twins. They drew blood from both members of each twin pair on three separate visits.

The team then applied sophisticated laboratory methods to the blood samples to measure more than 200 distinct immune-system components and activities.

Examining differences in the levels and activity states of these components within pairs of monozygotic and dizygotic twins, the scientists found that in three-quarters of the measurements, nonheritable influences - such as previous microbial or toxic exposures, vaccinations, diet and dental hygiene - trumped heritable ones when it came to accounting for differences within a pair of twins.

This environmental dominance was more pronounced in older identical twins (age 60 and up) than in younger twins (under age 20).

The study was published in the journal Cell.

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