Abstract

The guinea pig infected with parainfluenza 3 (P-3) has provided an animal model to study mechanisms of virus-induced asthma and airway hyperreactivity. Evidence to identify the mechanisms by which P-3 infection enhances airway hyperreactivity, however, has not been established. The present study evaluated the effect of P-3 infection on histamine release (HR) from isolated peripheral blood guinea pig basophils and lung mast cells. Basophil HR was determined in animals made basophilic with 13 daily intraperitoneal injections of sheep blood. On Day 10 of the sensitization, blood was obtained from all animals, and leukocyte HR was determined to sheep gammaglobulin (SG), which served as the secretagogue. After these baseline studies, the animals were separated into two groups; one was insufflated with P-3 virus and the other with growth medium that did not contain virus. Four days later, animals were killed, basophils and lung mast cells were isolated, HR was determined, and lung tissue was cultured for the presence of virus. In basophils isolated from animals proven to be infected with P-3 virus, we found significantly more histamine released in response to the lower doses of SG and a significant shift in the -log EC50 dose of this antigen causing HR in these cells. Experiments conducted with the calcium ionophore A23187 as the basophil secretagogue in the same experimental design did not demonstrate similar HR findings. Furthermore, a defect in calcium disposition did not account for the enhanced HR from basophils isolated from infected animals. HR from pulmonary mast cells was similar in cells isolated from P-3-infected and control insufflated animals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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