To the Editor
Asthma is an obstructive airway disease that involves chronic inflammation of the bronchial mucosa. In asthmatics, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production is elevated and cannot be countered effectively by antioxidant mechanisms, leading to increased oxidative stress levels compared to healthy subjects.1 ROS likely originate from inflammatory cells (eosinophils, neutrophils and macrophages) and mitochondria and their deleterious activity can result in lipid peroxidation products, modified proteins and oxidative DNA damage.
Asthma patients suffer from periodic acute worsening of symptoms (exacerbations or loss of control when milder), predominantly triggered by respiratory virus infections and allergen exposure. This is characterized by increased activation and recruitment of inflammatory cells to the airways, in which eosinophils are considered key players, and further enhanced oxidative stress. Eosinophils produce ROS upon exposure to, for example, viruses2 and allergens3 and by the concomitant release of eosinophil peroxidase (EPO) are able to brominate the amino acid tyrosine. A link between eosinophils and oxidative stress during asthma exacerbations is thus likely. Indeed, elevated amounts of bromotyrosine in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were detected after allergen challenge in asthmatics4 and in patients hospitalized for very severe asthma exacerbations.5
Eosinophil formation, maturation, recruitment and survival is regulated by interleukin‐5 (IL‐5), making this cytokine an important therapeutic target. Attenuation of eosinophils using anti‐IL‐5 significantly reduced exacerbation rates and corticosteroid dependency in severe asthmatics.6, 7 Here, we examined the impact of eosinophil depletion on oxidative stress and bromination in stable and virus‐induced worsening of asthma.
In a recent placebo‐controlled study, we attenuated blood and sputum eosinophil numbers and activation with mepolizumab (anti‐IL‐5) in steroid‐naïve mild asthma patients, followed by a challenge with rhinovirus 16 (RV16) to cause loss of asthma control.8 This study provided a unique opportunity to determine the contribution of eosinophils to oxidative stress and bromination during stable disease and after virus exposure. For this analysis, malondialdehyde (MDA; marker of oxidative stress), dityrosine (marker of oxidative stress), nitrotyrosine (marker of nitrosative stress), chlorotyrosine (marker of myeloperoxidase activity), bromotyrosine (marker of EPO activity) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA; inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase) were measured in exhaled breath condensate (EBC) and plasma at baseline, after mepolizumab or placebo treatment and after RV16 challenge. Details of the clinical trial and technical details of the analyses of biomarkers are available in the Data S1 and in Figure S1.
Dityrosine, chlorotyrosine and bromotyrosine were below the detection limit (0.4, 0.02 and 0.05 nmol/L, respectively) in EBC, while dityrosine and nitrotyrosine were not detected in plasma (detection limits of 2 and 1 nmol/L, respectively). Baseline levels of MDA, nitrotyrosine and ADMA in EBC and MDA, chlorotyrosine, bromotyrosine and ADMA in plasma were not significantly different between the mepolizumab and placebo group and did not change upon treatment (Figure S2). Apparently, blood and sputum eosinophils do not contribute to oxidative stress in stable mild asthma. This is in line with the unaffected bromotyrosine levels in plasma, which like ROS production depend on eosinophil degranulation. These findings may explain why mepolizumab does not improve clinical symptoms in stable mild asthmatics.9
We next determined the impact of the RV16 challenge on oxidative stress in both groups. EBC levels of MDA near‐significantly (P = 0.07) and levels of nitrotyrosine significantly increased after RV16 exposure in the placebo group, but not in the mepolizumab group (Figure 1A,B). EBC levels of ADMA, which can potentiate oxidative and nitrosative stress, did not change upon virus infection in either group (Figure 1C). After stratification for patients with high (>220/μL blood) and low (≤220/μL blood) eosinophil numbers (determined at the first study visit), MDA levels, but not those of nitrotyrosine and ADMA, were significantly increased after RV16 in the placebo group with high eosinophils only (Figure 1D‐F). When changes of biomarkers in response to RV16 exposure between patients treated with mepolizumab and placebo were compared, no differences were found (Figure 1G‐I). After stratification for eosinophil counts, however, MDA levels increased significantly and nitrotyrosine levels trendwise in the placebo group with high eosinophils as compared to the mepolizumab group with high eosinophils (Figure 1J‐L). No significant differences were observed after RV16 for any of the biomarkers in plasma (MDA, chlorotyrosine, bromotyrosine and ADMA) in either group, indicating that systemic markers do not reflect the oxidative status in the airways (Figure S3). Together, our findings suggest that eosinophils may drive local oxidative and, possibly indirectly, nitrosative events during virus‐induced loss of asthma control, but independent of ADMA. Given the low patient numbers in each of the stratified groups, these results require verification in larger cohorts.
Figure 1.

Exhaled breath condensate (EBC) levels of MDA (A, D, G and J), nitrotyrosine (B, E, H and K) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) (C, F, I and L) before and after RV16 challenge and corresponding delta values in patients treated with placebo (black dots) or mepolizumab (grey triangles). Dots/triangles represent patient individuals; bars and whiskers represent mean ± SEM. Paired or unpaired t‐tests: *P < 0.05
Besides attenuation of eosinophil numbers and activation, mepolizumab also prevented RV16‐induced neutrophil recruitment and activation.8 As a result, even though eosinophils generally possess a more potent respiratory burst,4, 5 the effects described here may not be fully attributed to eosinophils. Also, a role for basophils cannot be excluded, since these cells express the IL‐5 receptor as well and therefore may be affected by mepolizumab. Nonetheless, the significantly enhanced (delta) MDA EBC levels in the high eosinophilic placebo group point towards a contribution of particularly eosinophils to the virus‐induced increase in oxidative stress. It is likely that more pronounced effects on oxidative stress by eosinophils will occur in severe eosinophilic asthmatics or during severe virus‐induced exacerbations.
In conclusion, we have demonstrated for the first time that in mild asthma eosinophils contribute to oxidative and nitrosative stress after RV16‐induced loss of asthma control, but not in stable disease. Thus, targeting oxidative stress should be considered as treatment option during asthma exacerbations.
CONFLICTS OF INTERESTS
The authors declare no conflicts of interests.
Supporting information
de Groot LES, Sabogal Piñeros YS, Bal SM, et al. Do eosinophils contribute to oxidative stress in mild asthma?. Clin Exp Allergy. 2019;49:929‐931. 10.1111/cea.13389
Funding information
This study was supported by the Lung Foundation Netherlands (grant 3.2.10.069 and consortium grant 4.1.15.002) and GSK (CRT 114696).
de Groot and Sabogal Piñeros contributed equally to this work.
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