New research brings hope of a novel treatment for asthma patients resistant to corticosteroids.Researchers
from the RIKEN Centre for Integrative Medical Sciences and Keio
University in Japan report that a type of lymphocytes called natural
helper (NH) cells plays a critical role in corticosteroid resistance and
demonstrate that the anti-psychotic drug Pimozide can be used to
overcome resistance to steroids in severe asthma patients. T lymphocytes and NH cells in the asthmatic lung produce proteins named
interleukin (IL)-5 and IL-13 that are responsible for severe airway
inflammation. In asthma patients, inhaled steroids function by
suppressing both T lymphocytes and NH cells. However, in severe asthma patients, another protein called
interleukin-33 (IL-33) produced in the airways strongly activates NH
cells to produce IL-5 and IL-13, leading to severe airway inflammation. In the current study, the researchers led by Drs Shigeo Koyasu from
RIKEN and Koichiro Asano from Keio University, employed an experimental
mouse model for airway inflammation to study the pathway leading to
IL-33-mediated NH activation. Their research shows that NH resistance to
steroids is induced by the protein thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP),
present in the airways of severe asthma patients. The team tested reagents that block the intracellular signals triggered
by TSLP in NH cells. They identified one drug, Pimozide, an approved
anti-psychotic drug, that restored the effects of steroids on NH cells. The authors concluded saying that administration of Pimozide or related
drugs would be an effective treatment in human severe asthmatic
patients. The study is published in the journal Nature Communications.Source-ANI
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