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Identification of diurnal rhythmic blood markers in bronchial asthma

Karolina Krakowiak, Robert Maidstone, Amlan Chakraborty, Alexandra C. Kendall, Anna Nicolaou, Polly Downton, A Carvajal Cristian, Dave Singh, Andrew Loudon, David Ray, Hannah Durrington

2023ERJ Open Research10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rationale: Asthma is a rhythmic inflammatory disease of the airway, regulated by the circadian clock. "Spill-over" of airway inflammation into the systemic circulation occurs in asthma and is reflected in circulating immune cell repertoire. The objective of the present study was to determine how asthma impacts peripheral blood diurnal rhythmicity. Methods: 10 healthy and 10 mild/moderate asthma participants were recruited to an overnight study. Blood was drawn every 6 h for 24 h. Main results: is significantly more rhythmic in asthma compared to healthy controls. Blood immune cell numbers oscillate throughout the day, in health and asthma. Peripheral blood mononucleocytes from asthma patients show significantly enhanced responses to immune stimulation and steroid suppression at 16:00 h, compared to at 04:00 h. Serum ceramides show complex changes in asthma: some losing and others gaining rhythmicity. Conclusions: This is the first report showing that asthma is associated with a gain in peripheral blood molecular clock rhythmicity. Whether the blood clock is responding to rhythmic signals received from the lung or driving rhythmic pathology within the lung itself is not clear. Dynamic changes occur in serum ceramides in asthma, probably reflecting systemic inflammatory action. The enhanced responses of asthma blood immune cells to glucocorticoid at 16:00 h may explain why steroid administration is more effective at this time.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAsthmaImmune systemCircadian rhythmImmunologyInflammationGlucocorticoidInternal medicineAsthma and respiratory diseasesSphingolipid Metabolism and SignalingCircadian rhythm and melatonin
Identification of diurnal rhythmic blood markers in bronchial asthma | Litcius