Adrenal-derived stress hormones modulate ozone-induced lung injury and inflammation
Abstract
Ozone-induced systemic effects are modulated through activation of the neuro-hormonal stress response pathway. Adrenal demedullation (DEMED) or bilateral total adrenalectomy (ADREX) inhibits systemic and pulmonary effects of acute ozone exposure. To understand the influence of adrenal-derived stress hormones in mediating ozone-induced lung injury/inflammation, we assessed global gene expression (mRNA sequencing) and selected proteins in lung tissues from male Wistar-Kyoto rats that underwent DEMED, ADREX, or sham surgery (SHAM) prior to their exposure to air or ozone (1 ppm), 4 h/day for 1 or 2 days. Ozone exposure significantly changed the expression of over 2300 genes in lungs of SHAM rats, and these changes were markedly reduced in DEMED and ADREX rats. SHAM surgery but not DEMED or ADREX resulted in activation of multiple ozone-responsive pathways, including glucocorticoid, acute phase response, NRF2, and PI3K-AKT. Predicted targets from sequencing data showed a similarity between transcriptional changes induced by ozone and adrenergic and steroidal modulation of effects in SHAM but not ADREX rats. Ozone-induced increases in lung 116 in SHAM rats coincided with neutrophilic inflammation, but were diminished in DEMED and ADREX rats. Although ozone exposure in SHAM rats did not significantly alter mRNA expression of Ifn gamma and 11-4, the IL-4 protein and ratio of IL-4 to IFN gamma (IL-4/IFN-gamma) proteins increased suggesting a tendency for a Th2 response. This did not occur in ADREX and DEMED rats. We demonstrate that ozone-induced lung injury and neutrophilic inflammation require the presence of circulating epinephrine and corticosterone, which transcriptionally regulates signaling mechanisms involved in this response. Published by Elsevier Inc.
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Título según WOS: | ID WOS:000406735700026 Not found in local WOS DB |
Título de la Revista: | TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY |
Volumen: | 329 |
Editorial: | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE |
Fecha de publicación: | 2017 |
Página de inicio: | 249 |
Página final: | 258 |
DOI: |
10.1016/j.taap.2017.06.009 |
Notas: | ISI |