People Behind Our Research: Ilhem Messaoudi Decoding the Mysteries of the Immune System
LEXINGTON, Ky. (May 18, 2022) 鈥 The COVID-19 pandemic put a spotlight on the immune system, revealing there is still much about how it functions that is not well understood: Why do some people get severe disease and others don鈥檛? And why can certain factors like age, or comorbidities like obesity, cause the immune system to go haywire?
University of Kentucky researcher Ilhem Messaoudi, Ph.D., has dedicated her career to answering these questions.
As an immunologist, Messaoudi鈥檚 research gives scientists a better understanding of how the immune system works, paving the way for improving how people respond to vaccines and infections.
鈥淲hen it comes to immune responses, there is a sweet spot. Too little and the pathogen wins... too much and there is too much damage. As we鈥檝e seen with COVID-19, an exuberant immune response might even be worse,鈥 said Messaoudi. 鈥淚鈥檓 very interested in things that disrupt the proper function of the immune system because they can reveal more about how it works.鈥
Appointed chair of the Department of in November, Messaoudi leads a team of microbiologists and immunologists who study pathogens and our bodies鈥 responses to them.
Most recently at the , Messaoudi brings an expansive research portfolio to 海角禁区. Current projects in Messaoudi鈥檚 lab include studies examining the impacts of alcohol abuse, obesity and aging on the immune system. Her work also includes research on what makes certain pathogens cause the immune system to function poorly and cause prolonged disease.
Another focus of the Messaoudi lab is the maternal immune system, and the delicate balancing act it must perform in order to maintain that 鈥渟weet spot鈥 during pregnancy.
鈥淭he immune system of the mother has to undergo this massive transformation for nine months to facilitate implantation and promote the growth of a fetus, all while protecting both from microbial attacks,鈥 Messaoudi said. 鈥淭he immune response is dampened so the body does not reject the fetus, but not so much that it will put the mother or the fetus at jeopardy of getting an infection. What are the changes that take place in the maternal immune system to make this happen?鈥
Messaoudi鈥檚 research is focused on those changes and factors that can interfere with them, which can be detrimental to a pregnancy. She is currently working on two studies supported by the that focus on the impacts of maternal obesity on immune function of the mother and baby.
The studies are giving insight as to why women with a high pre-pregnancy body mass index and babies born to them have reduced immune function, making them more susceptible to severe disease.
Messaoudi鈥檚 research found that immune cells in the umbilical cord blood of babies born to mothers with obesity had DNA that was modified differently. Findings also show that mothers with obesity have increased inflammation in the placenta, which causes immune cells to 鈥渟hut down鈥 to avoid exacerbating the condition.
Messaoudi says the findings will help frame early interventions targeting maternal obesity, as well as future studies looking at how it could impact children later in life.
鈥淭he rates of obesity amongst women of childbearing age have increased at an alarming rate, making it one of the most common comorbidities during pregnancy,鈥 Messaoudi said. 鈥淭here's a lot of interest in understanding how maternal obesity impacts maternal-fetal health, but very few studies have dissected this question at the level of the cord blood, the placenta, and the mom. I think we're really helping the field of maternal-fetal health grow.鈥
And like so many other researchers during the pandemic, Messaoudi has also shifted the focus of her work to address COVID-19. Her lab has studied how SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy impacts the maternal and fetal immune systems. Adding to more knowledge, which she says the pandemic has brought to the field of immunology.
鈥淭here are still many unanswered questions, but because we鈥檝e diverted so many resources into understanding this one pathogen, we now understand so much more about the immune system than we did just two years ago.鈥