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. 2008 Jun 15;4(2):84-90.
doi: 10.1186/1710-1492-4-2-84. Epub 2008 Jun 15.

Asthma: eosinophil disease, mast cell disease, or both?

Affiliations

Asthma: eosinophil disease, mast cell disease, or both?

Peter Bradding. Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol. .

Abstract

: Although there is much circumstantial evidence implicating eosinophils as major orchestrators in the pathophysiology of asthma, recent studies have cast doubt on their importance. Not only does anti-interleukin-5 treatment not alter the course of the disease, but some patients with asthma do not have eosinophils in their airways, whereas patients with eosinophilic bronchitis exhibit a florid tissue eosinophilia but do not have asthma. In contrast, mast cells are found in all airways and localize specifically to key tissue structures such as the submucosal glands and airway smooth muscle within asthmatic bronchi, irrespective of disease severity or phenotype. Here they are activated and interact exclusively with these structural cells via adhesive pathways and through the release of soluble mediators acting across the distance of only a few microns. The location of mast cells within the airway smooth muscle bundles seems particularly important for the development and propagation of asthma, perhaps occurring in response to, and then serving to aggravate, an underlying abnormality in asthmatic airway smooth muscle function. Targeting this mast cell-airway smooth muscle interaction in asthma offers exciting prospects for the treatment of this common disease.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Eosinophil counts in the bronchial epithelium and lamina propria in normal subjects (N) and patients with mild steroid-naive asthma(A). Adapted from Bradding P et al. [8]
Figure 2
Figure 2
Potential mechanisms of mast cell activation in asthmatic airways.

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