Protective Role of Eosinophils and TNFa after Ozone Inhalation.
  
  
    
      
  
  
  
          
                      
          | Author |  | 
                      
          | Abstract | 
    :  Exposure to ozone induces deleterious responsesin the airways that include shortness of breath,
 inflammation, and bronchoconstriction. People
 with asthma have increased airway sensitivity to
 ozone and other irritants. Dr. Allison Fryer and
 colleagues addressed how exposure to ozone affects
 the immune and physiological responses in
 guinea pigs. Guinea pigs are considered a useful
 animal model for studies of respiratory and physiological
 responses in humans; their response to
 airborne allergens is similar to that in humans and
 shares some features of allergic asthma.
 Fryer and colleagues had previously observed
 that within 24 hours of exposure, ozone not only
 induced bronchoconstriction but also stimulated
 the production of new cells in the bone marrow,
 where all white blood cells develop. As a result
 of ozone exposure, increased numbers of newly
 synthesized white blood cells, particularly eosinophils,
 moved into the blood and lungs.
 The central hypothesis of the current study was
 that newly synthesized eosinophils recruited to
 the lungs 3 days after ozone exposure were beneficial
 to the animals because they reduced ozoneinduced
 bronchoconstriction. The investigators
 also hypothesized that the beneficial effect seen
 in normal (nonsensitized) animals was lost in animals
 that had been injected with an allergen, ovalbumin
 (sensitized). They also planned to explore
 the effects of inhibitors of certain cytokines (cellsignaling
 molecules).
 Immune responses in sensitized animals are
 dominated by a Th2 pattern, which is characterized
 by the synthesis of cytokines (interleukin
 [IL]-4, IL-5, and IL-13) and the Th2 subset of CD4+
 T lymphocytes and the cells they activate (predominantly
 eosinophils, and B lymphocytes that
 switch to making immunoglobulin E [IgE]). Thus,
 sensitized animals were used as a model of allergic
 humans, whose immune responses tend to be
 dominated by IgE.
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          | Year of Publication |  | 
                      
          | Journal | 
    :  Research report (Health Effects Institute) | 
                      
          | Issue |  | 
                      
          | Number of Pages |  | 
                      
          | ISSN Number |  | 
                      
          | Short Title | 
    :  Res Rep Health Eff Inst | 
                      
          | Download citation |  |