| The Effects of Ozone on Immune Function George J. Jakab,1 Ernst Wm. Spannhake,1 Brendan J. Canning,1
Steven R. Kleeberger,1 and Matthew I. Gilmour2 1The Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland;
2University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Abstract A review of the literature reveals that ozone (O3) exposure can either suppress or enhance immune responsiveness. These disparate effects elicited by O3 exposure depend, in large part, on the experimental design used, the immune parameters examined as well as the animal species studied. Despite the apparent contradictions, a general pattern of response to O3 exposure can be recognized. Most studies indicate that continuous O3 exposure leads to an early (days 0-3) impairment of immune responsiveness followed, with continued exposures, by a form of adaptation to O3 that results in a re-establishment of the immune response. The effects of O3 exposure on the response to antigenic stimulation also depend on the time at which O3 exposure occurred. Whereas O3 exposure prior to immunization is without effect on the response to antigen, O3 exposure subsequent to immunization suppresses the response to antigen. Although most studies have focused on immune responses in the lung, numerous investigators have provided functional and anatomical evidence to support the hypothesis that O3 exposure can have profound effects on systemic immunity. -- Environ Health Perspect 103(Suppl 2) :77-89 (1995) Key words: ozone, immunity, alveolar macrophages, peritoneal macrophages, immunogloblulins, mitogenesis, lymphocytes, respiratory infections, phagocytosis, prostaglandins The full version of this article is available for free in HTML format. |