Gregory J Smith, Morgan Nalesnik, Robert M Immormino, Jeremy M Simon, Jack R Harkema, Jason R Mock, Timothy P Moran, Samir N P Kelada
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Acute exposure to ozone (O3) causes pulmonary inflammation and injury in humans and animal models. In rodents, acute O3-induced inflammation and injury can be mitigated by pre-exposure to relatively low concentration O3, a phenomenon referred to as tolerance. While tolerance was first described long ago, the underlying mechanisms are not known. We hypothesized that alveolar macrophages (AMs) play a key role in tolerance to O3 based on prior studies with other exposures. To enable our studies, we first generated a mouse model in which female C57BL6/NJ mice were pre-exposed to filtered air (FA) or 0.8 ppm O3 for four days (4 hours/day), then challenged with 2 ppm O3 (3 hours) 2 days later, and phenotyped for airway inflammation and injury 6 or 24 hours thereafter. As expected, pre-exposure to O3 resulted in significantly reduced airway inflammation and injury 24 hours following O3-challenge. Tolerance was associated with regenerative hyperplasia in the terminal bronchioles and changes in the frequency of proliferating alveolar type 2 cells. O3 pre-exposure altered the expression of ∼1500 genes in AMs, most notably down regulation of Toll-like receptor and proinflammatory cytokine signaling pathways, suggesting AMs had become hypo-responsive. Depletion of tolerized AMs prior to acute O3 challenge did not, however, alter inflammation and injury. Additionally, adoptive transfer of tolerized AM to naïve, recipient mice failed to alter responses to acute O3 challenge. In total, our results argue against an important role for AMs in tolerance to ozone and suggest that other cell types are involved.
期刊介绍:
The mission of Toxicological Sciences, the official journal of the Society of Toxicology, is to publish a broad spectrum of impactful research in the field of toxicology.
The primary focus of Toxicological Sciences is on original research articles. The journal also provides expert insight via contemporary and systematic reviews, as well as forum articles and editorial content that addresses important topics in the field.
The scope of Toxicological Sciences is focused on a broad spectrum of impactful toxicological research that will advance the multidisciplinary field of toxicology ranging from basic research to model development and application, and decision making. Submissions will include diverse technologies and approaches including, but not limited to: bioinformatics and computational biology, biochemistry, exposure science, histopathology, mass spectrometry, molecular biology, population-based sciences, tissue and cell-based systems, and whole-animal studies. Integrative approaches that combine realistic exposure scenarios with impactful analyses that move the field forward are encouraged.