A big breakthrough in asthma treatment

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A recent study from Trinity College Dublin has made a breakthrough that may eventually lead to improved therapeutic options for people living with asthma.

The researchers have uncovered a critical role for a protein (Caspase-11), which had previously never been implicated in the disease.

The study is published in Nature Communications. One author is Luke O’Neill, Professor of Biochemistry in the School of Biochemistry and Immunology.

The team has been exploring the role that inflammation plays in asthma—a very common and often serious disease of childhood.

Caspase-11 is a protein with an important role in defending against bacteria, but the team has found that when it is over-active it can provoke a damaging inflammatory reaction.

When this happens, it is likely to be a key driver of allergic inflammation in the lungs of asthmatics.

According to the team, Caspase-11 can cause cells to die, which is a very inflammatory event as the cells then release their contents, which can irritate tissues in the body.

They have found that Caspase-11 is a key driver of inflammation in the airways in asthma. This causes the signs and symptoms of asthma which most notably involves difficulty breathing.

Although symptoms of mild asthma can be managed with current therapies, severe asthma remains very difficult to treat and asthma rates are constantly on the rise.

The team says a variety of irritants such as airborne pollutants, certain types of pollen and house dust mites can induce cell death in the lungs.

The work suggests that Caspase-11 is sensing these noxious things and causing disease.

The researchers think it holds great promise as a possible target for new drugs to treat asthma.

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