Longphre M, Zhang L Y, Harkema J R, Kleeberger S R
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 1996 Apr;80(4):1322-30. doi: 10.1152/jappl.1996.80.4.1322.
Ozone (O3) exposure produces inflammation in the airways of humans and animal models. However, the mechanism by which O3 affects these changes is uncertain. Mast cells are strategically located below the epithelium of the airways and are capable of releasing a number of proinflammatory mediators. We tested the hypothesis that mast cells contribute to inflammation, epithelial sloughing, and epithelial proliferation in the nasal and terminal bronchiolar murine airways after O3 exposure. Mast cell-sufficient (+/+), mast cell-deficient (W/Wv), and mast cell-repleted [bone marrow-transplanted (BMT) W/Wv] mice were exposed to 2 ppm O3 or filtered air for 3 h. Nasal and bronchoalveolar lavage fluids were collected 6 and 24 h after exposure. Differential cell counts and protein content of the lavage fluids were used as indicators of inflammation and permeability changes in the airways. O3-induced epithelial injury was assessed by light microscopy, and O3-induced DNA synthesis in airway epithelium was estimated by using a 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine-labeling index in the nasal and terminal bronchiolar epithelia. Relative to air control mice, O3 caused significant increases in inflammation, epithelial injury, and epithelial DNA synthesis in +/+ mice. There was no significant effect of O3 exposure on any measured parameter in the W/Wv mice. To further assess the role of mast cells in O3-induced epithelial damage, mast cells were restored in W/Wv mice by BMT from +/+ congeners. Relative to sham-transplanted W/Wv mice, O3 caused significant increases in epithelial damage and DNA synthesis as well as inflammatory indicators in BMT W/Wv mice. These observations are consistent with the hypothesis that mast cells significantly modulate the inflammatory and proliferative responses of the murine airways to O3.
臭氧(O₃)暴露会在人类和动物模型的气道中引发炎症。然而,O₃影响这些变化的机制尚不确定。肥大细胞战略性地分布在气道上皮下方,能够释放多种促炎介质。我们检验了这样一个假设:肥大细胞在O₃暴露后对小鼠鼻腔和终末细支气管气道中的炎症、上皮脱落和上皮增殖有影响。将肥大细胞充足(+/+)、肥大细胞缺陷(W/Wv)和肥大细胞补充 [骨髓移植(BMT)的W/Wv] 的小鼠暴露于2 ppm O₃或过滤空气中3小时。在暴露后6小时和24小时收集鼻腔和支气管肺泡灌洗液。灌洗液的细胞分类计数和蛋白质含量被用作气道炎症和通透性变化的指标。通过光学显微镜评估O₃诱导的上皮损伤,并通过使用鼻腔和终末细支气管上皮中的5-溴-2'-脱氧尿苷标记指数来估计O₃诱导的气道上皮中的DNA合成。相对于空气对照小鼠,O₃在+/+小鼠中导致炎症、上皮损伤和上皮DNA合成显著增加。O₃暴露对W/Wv小鼠的任何测量参数均无显著影响。为了进一步评估肥大细胞在O₃诱导的上皮损伤中的作用,通过来自+/+同基因小鼠的BMT在W/Wv小鼠中恢复肥大细胞。相对于假移植的W/Wv小鼠,O₃在BMT W/Wv小鼠中导致上皮损伤、DNA合成以及炎症指标显著增加。这些观察结果与肥大细胞显著调节小鼠气道对O₃的炎症和增殖反应这一假设一致。