Abstract

Mechanical removal of the airway epithelium alters the in vitro reactivity of airway smooth muscle. The modulation of reactivity may involve the release of inhibitory and excitatory factors from epithelial cells. Guinea pigs sensitized with ovalbumin have been used as an animal model of airway hyperreactivity. We evaluated the influence of the epithelium on the reactivity of in vitro tracheal smooth muscle from control and ovalbumin-sensitized guinea pigs, and the extent to which the presence of the epithelium affects the contractile response to in vitro challenge with ovalbumin. In both control and ovalbumin-sensitized tissues, epithelium removal increased the sensitivity of the preparations to histamine, methacholine and isoproterenol to a similar extent, i.e., 2- to 2.5-fold. Epithelium removal resulted in an 8.1-fold increase in sensitivity to ovalbumin in sensitized tissues. The epithelium appears not only to modulate the reactivity of the tissues to bronchoactive agents, but it also influences the magnitude of the contractile response following antigen challenge.

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