The effects of an intravenous injection of Sephadex beads on lung eosinophil infiltration and eosinophil peroxydase activity and its relationship to bronchial hyperresponsiveness was examined in guinea pigs. This Sephadex beads injection led to blood, lung and airway eosinophilia in association with bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Histologic examination of the lower bronchus indicated that the eosinophil number increased markedly in the mucosa and submucosa. In addition, the eosinophils surrounding the bronchioles 1 day after the Sephadex injection migrated further in airway submucosa and mucosa 7 and 14 days after. Moreover, the bronchial hyperresponsiveness is observed without histologic evidence of airway epithelium damage. Therefore, the bronchial hyperresponsiveness seems to be more related to the eosinophil infiltration in the airway epithelium and possibly eosinophil activation rather than to the eosinophil number recovered in the BAL fluid. We conclude that the maintenance of hyperresponsiveness state could be associated with the persistence of blood and airway eosinophilia.
The contribution of thromboxane A2 to platelet-activating factor (PAF)induced contraction of guinea-pig lung parenchyma strips (GPLPS) was investigated using an experimental design that allowed us to record the contractions of the tissues in parallel with the determination of thromboxane B2 (TXB2) levels in the organ baths by enzyme immunoassay. It was found that the first injection of PAF induced the contraction of GPLPS and the release of TXB2. Following subsequent additions of PAF to the same tissue, the contractile response was abolished but TXB2 levels were not significantly reduced. Pretreatment of the tissue with the thromboxane synthetase inhibitor OKY-046 (3.5, 170, and 350 microM) strongly inhibited the release of TXB2 but had no effect on the contraction of the tissues induced by PAF. The mechanism of PAF-induced contraction of GPLPS was further investigated using several drugs that interfere with arachidonic acid metabolism. It was found that pretreatment of the tissues with the cyclooxygenase and thromboxane synthetase inhibitors indomethacin (2.8, 28, and 56 microM) and OKY-046 (170 microM) or with the thromboxane antagonist SKF-88046 (1.25 and 12.5 microM) had no significant effect on the contractile response to PAF. The compound L-655,240 (2.5, 25, and 50 microM), which acts simultaneously as an antagonist of thromboxane and inhibitor of lipoxygenase, significantly reduced GPLPS contractions induced by PAF. Another lipoxygenase inhibitor, nordihydroguaiaretic acid (33 microM), and the inhibitor of both pathways of arachidonic acid metabolism, BW775c (110 microM), both reduced PAF-induced contractions of GPLPS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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