A. B. Ozturk, S. Mumbuc, R. Bayraktar, B. Gogebakan, H. Bayram
Background Although studies have reported an association between air pollutants and increased allergic airway diseases, such as allergic rhinitis and nasal polyposis, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. A limited number of studies have suggested that diesel exhaust particles (DEP) play a role in atopy and the pathogenesis of allergic upper airway diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of DEP on inflammatory cytokine release, and mRNA expression of transcription factors such as JNK and NF-β in primary nasal epithelial cells (NECs), in vitro.
Methods NECs from non-atopic, non-rhinitic subjects (controls) and patients with allergic rhinitis and nasal polyps were cultured and incubated with 0–100 μg/ml DEP for 24 h. ELISA and RT-PCR were used to assess the release of IL-8, GM-CSF, and RANTES, and mRNA expression for JNK and NF-κB, respectively.
Results Compared to control cells, NECs from subjects with atopic polyps released significantly greater amounts of IL-8 (median = 887 vs. 176.6 pg/μg cellular protein; p < 0.0001) and RANTES (median = 0.191 vs. 0.02 pg/μg cellular protein; p < 0.001). While 50 μg/ml DEP induced release of RANTES in NECs from patients with allergic rhinitis, 100 μg/ml DEP decreased IL-8 levels in NECs from both control and allergic rhinitic subjects. DEP did not affect mRNA expression for JNK and NF-κB from NECs of subjects with polyps.
Conclusions NECs from subjects with various pathologies may respond differently to DEP.
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