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Researchers to study pollution effects
on human immune systems
Dendritic cells look like something that escaped from
a 1950s horror movie — gooey monsters with grasping tentacles that
sprout in every direction.
They may look creepy, but UM researcher David Shepherd says they are among
our best friends. In fact, without these specialized white blood cells
our immune systems would be paralyzed in the face of foreign invaders.
“The reason they are shaped like that is that it helps them grab
onto pathogens or microorganisms that cause infectious diseases,”
said Shepherd, an assistant professor in UM’s Department of Biomedical
and Pharmaceutical Sciences. “They grab onto them and destroy them.
They eat them.”
However, these beneficial little monsters may be getting harmed by environmental
pollutants — things like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dioxin
— which suppress the immune system and compromise human health.
Shepherd’s UM lab has landed a five-year, $1.6 million grant from
the National Institutes of Health to study the issue.
Shepherd said most of the harmful chemicals they study are industrial
by-products that can persist in the environment for 10 years or more.
He said the grant will help his lab evaluate the health effects of exposure
to these types of chemicals and potentially find ways to bolster the immune
system to help people fight off infectious diseases or cancer.
But there is a flip side. Sometimes the immune system becomes hyperactive,
which can lead to autoimmune diseases and allergies. Shepherd said the
pollutants they study contain chemicals that could be used to knock down
overactive immune systems, helping people with such disorders.
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