Ozone-induced acute tracheobronchial epithelial injury: relationship to granulocyte emigration in the lung
- California Primate Research Center, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis (United States)
To investigate the relationship between granulocyte emigration and epithelial injury in specific airway generations of the tracheobronchial tree following short-term ozone exposure, we exposed rhesus monkeys for 8 h to 0.00 (controls) or 0.96 ppm ozone with post-exposure periods of 1, 12, 24, 72, and 168 h in filtered air before necropsy. There were five control and three exposed monkeys for each of the post-exposure times for a total of 20 monkeys. Neutrophils isolated from peripheral blood and labeled with 111In-tropolonate were infused in the cephalic vein in unanesthetized monkeys (except the 1-h group) 4 to 5 h before necropsy. The trachea and microdissected bronchi (fourth and ninth generations) and respiratory bronchioles (fifteenth generation) from the right upper lobe of each monkey were examined by electron microscopy. Labeled neutrophil influx into lung tissue and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was maximal at 12 h and returned to baseline by 24 h after exposure. This was in contrast to total neutrophils in BALF, which were significantly elevated through 24 h after exposure but returned to baseline by 72 h. Lavage protein was significantly elevated at 24 h after exposure but was at control levels at all other times. Morphometric observations showed epithelial necrosis at 1 and 12 h in the trachea and bronchioles but continued to be observed in significant numbers at 24 h after exposure in bronchi. A significant increase in the labeling index of epithelial cells was observed at 12 h only in bronchi. Epithelial necrosis and repair was associated with the presence of granulocytes in the epithelium and interstitium of all airway levels. However, eosinophils were maximally increased in the epithelium and interstitium of bronchi at 24 h after exposure when epithelial necrosis was maximal in these airways and when lavage protein was significantly elevated.
- OSTI ID:
- 5226997
- Journal Information:
- American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; (United States), Journal Name: American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; (United States) Vol. 6:5; ISSN 1044-1549; ISSN AJRBE
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRON. POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGS. AND BIOL. MAT.
ANIMAL TISSUES
ANIMALS
BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES
BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS
BLOOD
BLOOD CELLS
BODY
BODY FLUIDS
BRONCHI
DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES
ELECTRON CAPTURE RADIOISOTOPES
EPITHELIUM
INDIUM 111
INDIUM ISOTOPES
INFLAMMATION
INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI
ISOMERIC TRANSITION ISOTOPES
ISOTOPE APPLICATIONS
ISOTOPES
LAVAGE
LEUKOCYTES
MAMMALS
MATERIALS
MINUTES LIVING RADIOISOTOPES
MONKEYS
NECROSIS
NUCLEI
ODD-EVEN NUCLEI
OZONE
PATHOLOGICAL CHANGES
PRIMATES
PROSTAGLANDINS
RADIOISOTOPES
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
SENSITIVITY
SYMPTOMS
TISSUES
TOXICITY
TRACER TECHNIQUES
TRACHEA
VERTEBRATES