Published in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology, the study showed how a stress receptor, known as corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF1) can send signals to certain immune cells, called mast cells, and control how they defend the body.
For the study, researchers from the Michigan State University (MSU) in the US compared the histamine responses of mice to two types of stress conditions - psychological and allergic - where the immune system becomes overworked.
One group of mice was considered "normal" with CRF1 receptors on their mast cells and the other group had cells that lacked CRF1.
"This tells us that CRF1 is critically involved in some diseases initiated by these stressors," Moeser said.
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The CRF1-deficient mice exposed to allergic stress had a 54 per cent reduction in disease, while those mice who experienced psychological stress had a 63 per cent decrease.
The results could change the way everyday disorders such as asthma and the debilitating gastrointestinal symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome are treated.