Eosinophils are white blood cells comprising only 1â2% of blood leukocytes, but found in greater concentrations residing within the gastrointestinal tract, thymus, uterus as well as adipose and lymphoid tissues of healthy individuals. The number of eosinophils increases in association with inflammatory diseases including bronchial asthma, helminth infections, hyperâeosinophilic syndromes and allergic diseases. Eosinophils exhibit cytotoxic effects on microbes and helminths and damage body tissues through secretion of their granuleâderived cationic proteins, and have therefore earned a reputation as endâstage effector cells. However, the paradigm of eosinophils as strictly endâstage effectors is evolving. It is now recognised that eosinophils also store a vast array of preâformed cytokines within intracellular granules, and undergo distinct modes of degranulation. In large part due to their secretory products, eosinophils participate in health and disease, from metabolic homeostasis to adaptive immunity.
Key Concepts
Eosinophils are present only transiently in the peripheral blood and are primarily tissueâdwelling cells within the gastrointestinal tract, thymus, uterus as well as lymphoid and adipose tissues.
The number of eosinophils increases during infection with parasitic helminths and allergic inflammatory diseases, such as bronchial asthma.
Eosinophil intracellular granules react avidly with eosin dye because of their storage of strongly cationic proteins, which exert cytotoxic effects on parasites, microbes, tissues and cells.
Because of their secretion of cytotoxic granuleâderived cationic proteins, eosinophils are widely recognised as endâstage effector cells; however, eosinophils also store and secrete a vast array of cytokines and participate in diverse aspects of health and disease, from metabolic homeostasis to adaptive immunity.
Eosinophils release their granule contents into the extracellular space through three distinct modes of degranulation: classic exocytosis, piecemeal degranulation and cytolysis.
Recent data suggest that cellâfree, extracellularly deposited eosinophil granules expulsed during eosinophil cytolysis remain secretoryâcompetent organelles within tissues.