PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Peripheral blood neutrophilia as a biomarker of ozone-induced pulmonary inflammation.

  • Jenny A Bosson,
  • Anders Blomberg,
  • Nikolai Stenfors,
  • Ragnberth Helleday,
  • Frank J Kelly,
  • Annelie F Behndig,
  • Ian S Mudway

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081816
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e81816

Abstract

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BackgroundOzone concentrations are predicted to increase over the next 50 years due to global warming and the increased release of precursor chemicals. It is therefore urgent that good, reliable biomarkers are available to quantify the toxicity of this pollutant gas at the population level. Such a biomarker would need to be easily performed, reproducible, economically viable, and reflective of ongoing pathological processes occurring within the lung.MethodologyWe examined whether blood neutrophilia occurred following a controlled ozone challenge and addressed whether this could serve as a biomarker for ozone-induced airway inflammation. Three separate groups of healthy subjects were exposed to ozone (0.2 ppm, 2h) and filtered air (FA) on two separate occasions. Peripheral blood samples were collected and bronchoscopy with biopsy sampling and lavages was performed at 1.5h post exposures in group 1 (n=13), at 6h in group 2 (n=15) and at 18h in group 3 (n=15). Total and differential cell counts were assessed in blood, bronchial tissue and airway lavages.ResultsIn peripheral blood, we observed fewer neutrophils 1.5h after ozone compared with the parallel air exposure (-1.1±1.0x10(9) cells/L, pConclusionsThese data demonstrate a systemic neutrophilia in healthy subjects following an acute ozone exposure, which mirrors the inflammatory response in the lung mucosa and lumen. This relationship suggests that blood neutrophilia could be used as a relatively simple functional biomarker for the effect of ozone on the lung.