• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
BlackDoctor.org
Where Wellness & Culture Connect

Where Wellness & Culture Connect

  • Health Conditions
  • Wellness
  • Lifestyle
  • Longevity
  • Resource Centers
    • Cancer Resource Center
    • Covid Resource Center
  • Find A Doctor
  • BDO TV
Home / Health Conditions / Allergy / Gene Linked To Asthma In Blacks Discovered

Gene Linked To Asthma In Blacks Discovered

(BlackDoctor.org) — U.S. researchers have discovered a genetic mutation unique to African Americans that could help explain why blacks are so susceptible to asthma.

Prior studies looking for asthma genes have turned up several, but most of the studies have been too small to confirm these genes or to detect genetic changes unique to different races.

The new study, published on Sunday in the journal Nature Genetics, pools research from nine different research groups looking for genes associated with asthma among ethnically diverse North American populations.

It confirmed four genes that had been seen in previous studies and a fifth that shows up only in people of African descent.

You May Also Like
5 Top Sunscreens for Black Skin

“This is the first discovery of a gene where we see a signal in African Americans only,” Dan Nicolae of the University of Chicago, a study author and co-chair of a national research consortium called EVE that identified the gene, said in a telephone interview.

“The rates of asthma in different ethnic groups are different. African Americans have shown increasing asthma rates. We don’t know why. It can be due to changing environmental risk factors,” Nicolae said.

But, he said, the new findings suggest genetics also play a significant role.

“Understanding these genetic links is an important first step toward our goal of relieving the increased burden of asthma in this population,” said Dr. Susan Shurin, acting director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health, which co-funded the study.

You May Also Like
15 Natural Remedies for Aches and Pains

Asthma affects more than 300 million people globally, but effects vary widely. According to the researchers, U.S. asthma rates in 2001 to 2003 ranged from 7.7 percent among European Americans to 12.5 percent among African Americans.

Carole Ober of the University of Chicago, who co-leads the EVE consortium, said the findings confirm the significance of four genes identified in a large European asthma genetics study published last year called GABRIEL, offering strong evidence that these genes are important across ethnic groups.

But because the study was so large and ethnically diverse — including data on European Americans, African Americans, African Caribbeans and Latinos — it enabled the researchers to find this new gene variant that exists only in African Americans and African Caribbeans.

This new variant, located in a gene called PYHIN1, is part of a family of genes linked with the body’s response to viral infections, Ober said.

“We were very excited when we realized it doesn’t exist in Europe,” she said.

The team stressed that each gene variant on its own plays only a small role in increasing asthma risk, but that risk could be multiplied when combined with other risk genes and with environmental factors, such as smoking, that also increase asthma risk.

“It’s been extraordinarily challenging to try to find variation in genes that are associated with risk for developing asthma that can be replicated among populations. It’s a very complex disease with a lot of genes and a lot of environmental factors influencing risk,” Ober said.

The findings now give researchers new areas to explore in understanding the interplay of genetics and the environment in asthma risk, and may lead to better treatments.

“What you see here in this paper is only the beginning,” Nicolae said.

August 3, 2011 by Lorraine Jones, BDO Staff Writer

Read Next Article

The Latest In Allergy

allergy season

Allergy Season: What to Have on Hand to Make Sure You’re Fully Covered

Sneezing, watery eyes, runny nose… If you have allergies, then you’ve probably experienced these symptoms more often than you’d like. These symptoms can affect your daily life, but the good news is that there are ways to make sure you’re read more about Allergy Season: What to Have on Hand to Make Sure You’re Fully Covered
food allergy

Sudden Reaction to a Food? It Could Be Adult-Onset Allergy

You bite into an apple and suddenly your mouth starts tingling. Or you eat shrimp for dinner and get hives. food allergies You're not a kid and you've been able to eat these foods your whole life, so what's going read more about Sudden Reaction to a Food? It Could Be Adult-Onset Allergy
allergies

7 Ways You’re Making Your Allergies Worse

Are dry, itchy eyes hiding behind those dope sunglasses? The warmer months can be brutal for anyone with seasonal allergies, and summer fun-in-the-sun may bring even more allergy symptoms. If you've noticed that your allergies go into high gear this read more about 7 Ways You’re Making Your Allergies Worse
Swollen Eyes

Got Allergies? 6 Tips To Relieve Swollen Eyes

In need of some allergy relief for your eyes? When spring arrives, summer flowers bloom, and fall leaves hit the ground, count on allergens to be an integral part of the action. And that’s only on the outside. Inside, allergens read more about Got Allergies? 6 Tips To Relieve Swollen Eyes
how to allergy proof your home

How To Allergy-Proof Your Home

If you have hay fever or allergic asthma, take a few steps to reduce allergens in your home. Some steps to reduce indoor allergens are complicated and time-consuming — but there are some easy things you can do that may read more about How To Allergy-Proof Your Home
allergy season

Allergy Season Is Near: Be Prepared

Allergy season is a perennial annoyance, but if you're focusing on the pandemic, they still could catch you by surprise, an expert says. "People still have COVID on their minds," says Dr. Mark Corbett, president of the American College of read more about Allergy Season Is Near: Be Prepared

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to our newsletter

Poll

Popular Posts

  • Like Father, Like Son: ‘Miami Vice’ Star’s Son Handsome Like his DaddyLike Father, Like Son: 'Miami Vice' Star's Son Handsome Like his Daddy
  • LL Cool J & Wife Simone Smith Celebrate 25 Years Married: “We Celebrate Life”LL Cool J & Wife Simone Smith Celebrate 25 Years Married: "We Celebrate Life"
  • Football Legend & Coach Deion Sanders Has Toes AmputatedFootball Legend & Coach Deion Sanders Has Toes Amputated
  • Marjorie Harvey: Fit, Fine & 57!Marjorie Harvey: Fit, Fine & 57!
  • Halle Berry: Over 50 ‘Just Keeps Getting Better With Time’Halle Berry: Over 50 'Just Keeps Getting Better With Time'

Podcast

Footer

Where Wellness & Culture Connect

BDO is the world’s largest and most comprehensive online health resource specifically targeted to African Americans. BDO understands that the uniqueness of Black culture - our heritage and our traditions - plays a role in our health. BDO gives you access to innovative new approaches to the health information you need in everyday language so you can break through the disparities, gain control and live your life to its fullest.

Connect With Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Learn More About

  • Hepatitis C
  • Diabetes
  • Sickle Cell
  • Mental Health
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise With Us
  • BlackDoctor.org Advertising and Sponsorship Policy
  • Daily Vitamina
  • TBH

Copyright © 2022, BlackDoctor, Inc. All rights reserved.