Glencross Drew A, Ho Tzer-Ren, Camiña Nuria, Hawrylowicz Catherine M, Pfeffer Paul E
Asthma UK Centre in Allergic Mechanisms of Asthma, King's College London, Guy's Hospital, London, SE1 9RT, UK; MRC Centre for Environment and Health, King's College London, Franklin Wilkins Building, London, SE1 9NH, UK.
MRC Centre for Environment and Health, King's College London, Franklin Wilkins Building, London, SE1 9NH, UK.
Free Radic Biol Med. 2020 May 1;151:56-68. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2020.01.179. Epub 2020 Jan 30.
A well-functioning immune system is vital for a healthy body. Inadequate and excessive immune responses underlie diverse pathologies such as serious infections, metastatic malignancies and auto-immune conditions. Therefore, understanding the effects of ambient pollutants on the immune system is vital to understanding how pollution causes disease, and how that pathology could be abrogated. The immune system itself consists of multiple types of immune cell that act together to generate (or fail to generate) immune responses and in this article we review evidence of how air pollutants can affect different immune cell types such as particle-clearing macrophages, inflammatory neutrophils, dendritic cells that orchestrate adaptive immune responses and lymphocytes that enact those responses. Common themes that emerge are of the capacity of air pollutants to stimulate pro-inflammatory immune responses across multiple classes of immune cell. Air pollution can enhance T helper lymphocyte type 2 (Th2) and T helper lymphocyte type 17 (Th17) adaptive immune responses, as seen in allergy and asthma, and dysregulate anti-viral immune responses. The clinical effects of air pollution, in particular the known association between elevated ambient pollution and exacerbations of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), are consistent with these identified immunological mechanisms. Further to this, as inhaled air pollution deposits primarily on the respiratory mucosa this review focuses on mechanisms of respiratory disease. However, as discussed in the article, air pollution also affects the wider immune system for example in the neonate and gastrointestinal tract. Whilst the many identified actions of air pollution on the immune system are notably diverse, immunological research does suggest potential strategies to ameliorate such effects, for example with vitamin D supplementation. An in-depth understanding of the immunological effects of ambient pollutants should hopefully yield new ideas on how to reduce the adverse health effects of air pollution.
一个运转良好的免疫系统对身体健康至关重要。免疫反应不足和过度是多种病症的基础,如严重感染、转移性恶性肿瘤和自身免疫性疾病。因此,了解环境污染物对免疫系统的影响对于理解污染如何导致疾病以及如何消除该病症至关重要。免疫系统本身由多种免疫细胞组成,这些免疫细胞共同作用以产生(或无法产生)免疫反应。在本文中,我们综述了空气污染物如何影响不同免疫细胞类型的证据,例如清除颗粒的巨噬细胞、炎性中性粒细胞、协调适应性免疫反应的树突状细胞以及执行这些反应的淋巴细胞。出现的共同主题是空气污染物能够在多类免疫细胞中刺激促炎免疫反应。空气污染可增强2型辅助性T淋巴细胞(Th2)和17型辅助性T淋巴细胞(Th17)的适应性免疫反应,如在过敏和哮喘中所见,并使抗病毒免疫反应失调。空气污染的临床影响,特别是环境污染升高与哮喘和慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)加重之间的已知关联,与这些已确定的免疫机制一致。除此之外,由于吸入的空气污染主要沉积在呼吸道黏膜上,本综述重点关注呼吸系统疾病的机制。然而,正如本文所讨论的,空气污染也会影响更广泛的免疫系统,例如在新生儿和胃肠道中。虽然空气污染对免疫系统的许多已确定作用明显多样,但免疫学研究确实提出了改善此类影响的潜在策略,例如补充维生素D。对环境污染物免疫影响的深入理解有望产生关于如何减少空气污染对健康不利影响的新想法。