4.0 Article

Innate Lymphoid Cell-Dependent Airway Epithelial and Inflammatory Responses to Inhaled Ozone: A New Paradigm in Pathogenesis

Journal

TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 8, Pages 993-1003

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0192623319873872

Keywords

ozone; mice; rats; monkeys; mucous cell metaplasia; eosinophils; innate lymphoid cells; nonallergic rhinitis and asthma

Funding

  1. US EPA's Clean Air Research Center grant [RD 83479701]
  2. NIH grant [T35OD016477]
  3. Albert C. and Lois E. Dehn Endowment

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Epidemiological associations have been made between the new onset of childhood rhinitis/asthma and exposures to elevated ambient levels of ozone, a commonly encountered gaseous air pollutant. Our laboratory was the first to find that mice repeatedly exposed to ozone develop nasal type 2 immunity and eosinophilic rhinitis with mucous cell metaplasia. More recently, we have found that these ozone-induced upper airway alterations are mediated by group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) and not by T and B cells that are important in adaptive immune responses typically associated with allergic rhinitis and asthma. Furthermore, repeated exposures of mice to ozone cause ILC2-mediated type 2 immunity and airway pathology in the lungs, like those found in the nasal airways. Our recent findings in ozone-exposed mice complement and extend previous reports of nonallergic nasal airway disease in ozone-exposed rats and nonhuman primates. Overall, these experimental results in laboratory animals suggest a plausible ILC2-dependent paradigm for the toxicologic pathobiology that underlies the development of nonallergic rhinitis/asthma in children who live in environments with repeated occurrences of high ambient concentrations of ozone.

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