Daylight boosts your immune system, study finds

Date:

Daylight may enhance the immune system’s ability to fight infections, according to a new study led by the University of Auckland and published in Science Immunology.

Researchers used zebrafish- a small freshwater fish- as a model organism, due to its genetic similarities to humans.

The study focused on neutrophils, the most abundant immune cells in the body and a type of white blood cell. These cells are the first to respond to infection, rushing to the affected area and killing invading bacteria.

The researchers found that neutrophils have a circadian clock that tracks the day’s progression and enhances their ability to kill bacteria. Light exposure has the greatest effect on these internal clocks.

“Since neutrophils are the first immune cells recruited to inflamed areas, our discovery has wide-ranging therapeutic implications for many inflammatory diseases,” said lead researcher Dr. Christopher Hall, Associate Professor in the Department of Molecular Medicine and Pathology at the University of Auckland.

The findings pave the way for the development of treatments that target neutrophils’ circadian rhythms to strengthen their infection-fighting function.

Also read: WHO reaches deal on how the world would tackle future pandemics

Share post:

Popular

More like this
Related

Olympic doping tests clean at Milan-Cortina

No positive tests recorded so far For the first time...

ON THIS DAY: The first mobile phone call (1973)

In 1973, history was made in downtown Manhattan, New...

Greek PM announces cabinet reshuffle over EU farm aid fraud

Probe into EU farm aid scandal widens A Greece cabinet...

Cloud Tech Expo returns to Limassol for a second year

Cloud Tech Expo returns to Limassol for a second...