The course of allergen-induced leukocyte infiltration in human and experimental asthma |
| |
Authors: | Lommatzsch Marek Julius Peter Kuepper Michael Garn Holger Bratke Kai Irmscher Sabrina Luttmann Werner Renz Harald Braun Armin Virchow J Christian |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Pneumology, Clinic of Internal Medicine, University of Rostock, Ernst-Heydemann-Strasse 6, 18057 Rostock, Germany. marek.lommatzsch@med.uni-rostock.de |
| |
Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Although the timing of allergen-induced bronchoconstriction is well defined, there is little information about the kinetics of allergen-induced leukocyte infiltration in asthma and its comparability between human and animal models of asthma. OBJECTIVE: To investigate systematically allergen-induced leukocyte infiltration into the airway lumen in human and experimental asthma by using bronchoalveolar lavage. METHODS: Patients with allergic asthma were lavaged at different time points as long as 1 week after segmental allergen challenge. Allergen-sensitized mice were lavaged as long as 3 weeks after allergen challenge. Differential cell counts, lymphocyte subsets, and cytokines were assessed in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. RESULTS: In both models, neutrophil infiltration was a relatively early event (maximum: 18 hours after challenge). In contrast, eosinophil infiltration peaked 42 hours (human model) to 4 days (mouse model) after allergen challenge, paralleled by an IL-5 peak in this period. There were elevated macrophage counts over a period of several days after allergen challenge in both models. Lymphocytes (predominantly CD4+ T cells) peaked 18 hours after challenge in the human model, but not until 2 weeks after challenge in the murine model. CONCLUSION: Early neutrophil accumulation (within hours after challenge) and delayed eosinophil accumulation (within days after challenge) in the airway lumen are common features of allergen-induced airway inflammation, whereas lymphocyte kinetics are dependent on the asthma model. CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Similarities in the infiltration kinetics of granulocytes after allergen challenge suggest a common role for these cells in asthma, whereas the presumed orchestration of allergic inflammation by lymphocytes appears to differ between the models. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|