2020 article

Multidimensional Analysis of Bronchoalveolar Lavage Cytokines and Mast Cell Proteases Reveals Interferon-γ as a Key Biomarker in Equine Asthma Syndrome

Woodrow, J. S., Hines, M., Sommardahl, C., Flatland, B., Davis, K. U., Lo, Y., … Lennon, E. M. (2020, February 25). (Vol. 2). Vol. 2.

By: J. Woodrow*, M. Hines*, C. Sommardahl*, B. Flatland*, K. Davis n, Y. Lo*, Z. Wang*, M. Sheats n, E. Lennon*

co-author countries: United States of America 🇺🇸
Source: ORCID
Added: February 26, 2020

Abstract Naturally-occurring equine asthma is an inflammatory lung disease characterized by chronic, partially reversible airway obstruction, pulmonary remodeling and lower airway inflammation. The cytokine profiles that distinguish asthma groups or subtypes in horses have not been systematically classified, and mast cell phenotypes, which, in human asthma, correlate with asthma type, lung function, and response to therapy, have not been well-described in horses. The purpose of this study was to: (1) compare mast cell protease mRNA expression between healthy and asthmatic horses, (2) analyze the cytokine profile present in BALF of currently defined equine asthma groups, and (3) use these data to evaluate potential biomarkers of defined asthma groups. Mast cell protease gene expression and select cytokine gene expression in cells isolated from BALF, and BALF multiplex cytokine assays were performed. Multidimensional analysis demonstrated that IFNγ differentiates severe from moderate asthma, and that TNFα and CXCL8 are key biomarkers of equine asthma subtype. Expression of chymase mRNA, a mast cell-specific protease, was significantly decreased in horses with mastocytic asthma. These results will help further define EAS immunopathology, which could improve understanding and definitions of asthma groups, while also potentially identify novel therapeutic strategies.