Allergic diseases represent some of the most common immunological disorders with high clinical and economic impact. Despite intensive research, there are still few universally accepted and reliable biomarkers capable of predicting their development at an early age.
There is therefore a pressing need for identification of potential predictive factors and validation of their prognostic value by correlating them with allergy development. Dysbalance of the branches of immune response, most often excessive Th2 polarization, is the principal cause of allergic diseases.
Regulatory T cells (Treg) are a crucial population for the timely establishment of physiological immune polarization and induction and maintenance of tolerance against environmental antigens. This makes them a potentially promising candidate for an early marker predicting allergy development.
In our study, we analysed samples of cord blood of children of allergic mothers and children of healthy mothers by flow cytometry and retrospectively correlated the data with clinical allergy status of the children at the age of 6 to 10 years. Studied parameters included cord blood Treg population proportions and functional properties - intracellular presence of IL-10 and TGF-b, MFI of FoxP3.
We observed higher percentage of Tregs in cord blood of children who did not develop allergy compared with allergic children. Further, we found higher numbers of IL-10+ Tregs in cord blood of healthy children of healthy mothers than in cord blood of children of allergic mothers and decreased TGF-b+ cord blood Tregs in the group of allergic children of allergic mothers compared to all other groups.