Experimental lung research
-
Sequential exposures to inhaled environmental pollutants may result in injuries/responses not predicted by evaluating exposures to an individual toxicant. This may indicate that the lung is damaged or primed by earlier events, so exposure to a nontoxic dose of an environmental pollutant may be sufficient to trigger adverse responses. The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that stimulating lung epithelial damage or inflammatory cell activation followed by a second stimulus leads to responses not seen after individual exposures in the postnatal lung. ⋯ These results demonstrate that preexposure to LPS, which primarily activates inflammatory cell recruitment, can cause sensitization to a secondary stimulus. However, preexposure to ozone, which primarily damages the epithelium, inhibited proinflammatory responses. Thus it was concluded that sequential exposures to ozone and LPS resulted in responses not predicted by evaluating individual exposures during postnatal lung development.