Ozone and diesel exhaust airway signaling, inflammation and pollutant interactions

University dissertation from Umeå : Umeå universitet

Abstract: It is well established that air pollution has detrimental effects on both human health as well as the environment. Exposure to ozone and particulate matter pollution, is associated with an increase in cardiopulmonary mortality and morbidity. Asthmatics, elderly and children have been indicated as especially sensitive groups. With a global increase in use of vehicles and industry, ambient air pollution represents a crucial health concern as well as a political, economical and environmental dilemma.Both ozone (O3) and diesel exhaust (DE) trigger oxidative stress and inflammation in the airways, causing symptoms such as wheezing, coughing and reduced lung function. The aim of this thesis was to further examine which pro-inflammatory signaling pathways that are initiated in the airways by ozone, as compared to diesel exhaust. Furthermore, to study the effects of these two ambient air pollutants in a sequential exposure, thus mimicking an urban profile. In order to investigate this in healthy as well as asthmatic subjects, walk-in exposure chambers were utilized and various airway compartments were studied by obtaining induced sputum, endobronchial biopsies, or airway lavage fluids.In asthmatic subjects, exposure to 0.2 ppm of O3 induced an increase in the cytokines IL 5, GM-CSF and ENA-78 in the bronchial epithelium six hours post-exposure. The healthy subjects, however, displayed no elevations of bronchial epithelial cytokine expression in response to the ozone exposure. The heightened levels of neutrophil chemoattractants and Th2 cytokines in the asthmatic airway epithelium may contribute to symptom exacerbations following air pollution exposure.When examining an earlier time point post O3 exposure (1½ hours), healthy subjects exhibited a suppression of IL-8 as well as of the transcription factors NF?B and c-jun in the bronchial epithelium, as opposed to after filtered air exposure. This inhibition of early signal transduction in the bronchial epithelium after O3 differs from the response detected after exposure to DE.Since both O3 and DE are associated with generating airway neutrophilia as well as causing direct oxidative damage, it raises the query of whether daily exposure to these two air pollutants creates a synergistic or additive effect. Induced sputum attained from healthy subjects exposed in sequence to 0.2 ppm of O3 five hours following DE at a PM concentration of 300 µg/m3, demonstrated significantly increased neutrophils, and elevated MPO levels, as compared to the sequential DE and filtered air exposure.O3 and DE interactions were further investigated by analyses of bronchoalveolar lavage and bronchial wash. It was demonstrated that pre-exposure to DE, as compared to filtered air, enhances the O3-induced airway inflammation, in terms of an increase in neutrophil and macrophage numbers in BW and higher EPX expression in BAL.In conclusion, this thesis has aspired to expand the knowledge of O3-induced inflammatory pathways in humans, observing a divergence to the previously described DE initiated responses. Moreover, a potentially adverse airway inflammation augmentation has been revealed after exposure to a relevant ambient combination of these air pollutants. This provides a foundation towards an understanding of the cumulative airway effects when exposed to a combination of ambient air pollutants and may have implications regarding future regulations of exposure limits.

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