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Extensive Eosinophil Degranulation and Peroxidase-Mediated Oxidation of Airway Proteins Do Not Occur in a Mouse Ovalbumin-Challenge Model of Pulmonary Inflammation
Author(s) -
Karen L. Denzler,
Michael T. Borchers,
Jeffrey R. Crosby,
Grzegorz Cieslewicz,
Edith M. Hines,
J. Paul Justice,
Stephania A. Cormier,
Kari A. Lindenberger,
Wei Song,
Weijia Wu,
Stanley L. Hazen,
Gerald J. Gleich,
James J. Lee,
Nancy A. Lee
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.167.3.1672
Subject(s) - eosinophil peroxidase , ovalbumin , degranulation , eosinophil , immunology , bronchoalveolar lavage , methacholine , eosinophil granule proteins , major basic protein , eosinophil cationic protein , knockout mouse , lung , medicine , asthma , respiratory disease , receptor , immune system
Paradigms of eosinophil effector function in the lungs of asthma patients invariably depend on activities mediated by cationic proteins released from secondary granules during a process collectively referred to as degranulation. In this study, we generated knockout mice deficient for eosinophil peroxidase (EPO) to assess the role(s) of this abundant secondary granule protein in an OVA-challenge model. The loss of EPO had no effect on the development of OVA-induced pathologies in the mouse. The absence of phenotypic consequences in these knockout animals extended beyond pulmonary histopathologies and airway changes, as EPO-deficient animals also displayed OVA-induced airway hyperresponsiveness after provocation with methacholine. In addition, EPO-mediated oxidative damage of proteins (e.g., bromination of tyrosine residues) recovered in bronchoalveolar lavage from OVA-treated wild-type mice was <10% of the levels observed in bronchoalveolar lavage recovered from asthma patients. These data demonstrate that EPO activities are inconsequential to the development of allergic pulmonary pathologies in the mouse and suggest that degranulation of eosinophils recruited to the lung in this model does not occur at levels comparable to those observed in humans with asthma.

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