Some hairy cells in the nose may trigger
sneezing and allergies to dust mites, mold and other substances, new work with
mice suggests.
When exposed to allergens, these “brush
cells” make chemicals that lead to inflammation, researchers report January
17 in Science Immunology. Only immune
cells previously were thought to make such inflammatory chemicals — fatty
compounds known as lipids. The findings may provide new clues about how people
develop allergies.
Brush cells are shaped like teardrops
topped by tufts of hairlike projections. In people, mice and other animals, these
cells are also found in the linings of the trachea and the intestines, where
they are known as tuft
cells (SN: 4/13/18). However, brush
cells are far more common in the nose than in other tissues, and may help the
body identify when pathogens or noxious chemicals have been inhaled, says Lora
Bankova, an allergist and immunologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in
Boston.
Bankova and her colleagues discovered
that, when exposed to certain molds or dust mite proteins, brush cells in
mice’s noses churn out inflammation-producing lipids, called cysteinyl
leukotrienes. The cells also made the lipids when encountering ATP, a chemical used
by cells for energy that also signals when nearby cells are damaged, as in an
infection. Mice exposed to allergens or ATP developed swelling of their nasal
tissues. But mice that lacked brush cells suffered much less inflammation.
Such inflammation may lead to allergies
in some cases. The researchers haven’t yet confirmed that brush cells in human
noses respond to allergens in the same way as these cells do in mice.