Editorial overview
Allergy and hypersensitivity: Mechanisms of allergic disease

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Introduction

The immune system is a highly interactive network that makes its decisions based on input from all organs, tissues, infections, normal flora bacteria, and many or even any environmental agents. General rules of immunity versus tolerance as well as co-evolutionary development apply to the allergen-specific immune response, because rules for regulators and effectors of this have probably been developed in a co-evolutionary manner with helminths, mites, insect venoms, foods and other allergens. IgE sensitization against allergens showed a steep increase of up to 50% in the population together with an increase in clinical allergic disease of up to 30% in some communities, particularly during the past three decades; reasons for these epidemics, underlying mechanisms and novel treatment approaches will be intensely investigated and reported in this issue of the journal.

Section snippets

What makes a protein an allergen?

In diseases that involve the immune system such as allergy, autoimmunity, transplantation rejection, cancer and infections, antigens are either the direct or the indirect cause of the disease and can be targeted for the treatment [1]. Investigation of what makes a protein an allergen has been a prerequisite for understanding allergic disease to develop strategies for immune intervention. Allergens are almost always proteins, but not all proteins are allergens. A protein that has allergenic

Allergy epidemics and hygiene

The increasing prevalence of allergic disease in the past decades seems to be associated with the westernized lifestyle, but the underlying mechanisms are not completely understood. Extensive epidemiological studies under certain circumstances of lifestyles have provided some insight into possible reasons for the so-called ‘allergy epidemics’. The ‘hygiene hypothesis’ is one of the main propositions to explain this. Epidemiological and clinical data support the hygiene hypothesis as a cause of

Immune response or no response to allergens

Co-evolutionary development of the immune system together with infections and non-infectious environmental proteins (allergens) has generated biologically relevant thresholds and has caused major directions to be taken by the immune system. With few exceptions, the immune response against acute viral infections is directed towards complete neutralization of the microorganism. In contrast, the immune response to chronic non-cytopathic viruses (hepatitis B virus, hepatitis C virus and HIV),

Novel curative treatment strategies

Allergen-SIT faces several problems related to the content of the vaccine, type of the adjuvant, route of application, long duration of treatment, side effects and limited efficacy [39]. Currently, allergen-SIT is performed using vaccines based on allergen extracts, which might contain allergens as well as non-allergenic or even toxic proteins. In addition, many extracts derived from natural materials contain innate immune response triggering substances, such as lipopolysaccharide, which is

Conclusions

Extensive progress has been made in understanding of mechanisms of allergic disease with the complex interaction of effector T cells, NKT cells, other effector cells, resident tissue cells and TReg cells. As observed in natural immune responses in healthy individuals, peripheral T-cell tolerance is the key immunological mechanism in healthy immune response to allergens. Changes in the fine balance between allergen-specific TReg and Th2 and/or Th1 cells are crucial in the development and also

Acknowledgments

The author's laboratory is supported by the Swiss National Foundation Grant: 32-105865 and Global Allergy and Asthma European Network (GA2LEN).

Cezmi A Akdis is Professor of Immunology and Director of the Swiss Institute of Allergy and Asthma Research (SIAF). He is the chairman and coordinator of the Scientific Programme Committee of the European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) and Assembly Member of the Global Allergy and Asthma European Network (GA2LEN). His research interests include: mechanisms of peripheral tolerance to allergens; effector mechanisms of allergic inflammation; mechanisms of curing allergy and

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