4.7 Review

Eosinophils as Drivers of Severe Eosinophilic Asthma: Endotypes or Plasticity?

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms221810150

Keywords

eosinophilic asthma; eosinophils; endotypes; plasticity; eosinophil subsets; immunotherapy

Funding

  1. Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek-Vlaanderen (FWO)
  2. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique (FRS)-FNRS (Belgium) under EOS [30565447, T.0052.18 REGEOS]
  3. Leon Fredericq Foundation (Liege University)
  4. Liege University

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Asthma is now recognized as a heterogeneous disease with different phenotypes driven by distinct pathophysiological mechanisms. Eosinophilic asthma is a common phenotype characterized by the presence of eosinophils, which have become a primary therapeutic target. Recent research suggests that different SEA phenotypes may involve differences in eosinophil biology.
Asthma is now recognized as a heterogeneous disease, encompassing different phenotypes driven by distinct pathophysiological mechanisms called endotypes. Common phenotypes of asthma, referred to as eosinophilic asthma, are characterized by the presence of eosinophilia. Eosinophils are usually considered invariant, terminally differentiated effector cells and have become a primary therapeutic target in severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA) and other eosinophil-associated diseases (EADs). Biological treatments that target eosinophils reveal an unexpectedly complex role of eosinophils in asthma, including in SEA, suggesting that not all eosinophils are equal. In this review, we address our current understanding of the role of eosinophils in asthma with regard to asthma phenotypes and endotypes. We further address the possibility that different SEA phenotypes may involve differences in eosinophil biology. We discuss how these differences could arise through eosinophil endotyping, viz. adaptations of eosinophil function imprinted during their development, or through tissue-induced plasticity, viz. local adaptations of eosinophil function through interaction with their lung tissue niches. In doing so, we also discuss opportunities, technical challenges, and open questions that, if addressed, might provide considerable benefits in guiding the choice of the most efficient precision therapies of SEA and, by extension, other EADs.

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