Pinkerton Kent E, Zhou Yamei, Zhong Caiyun, Smith Kevin R, Teague Stephen V, Kennedy Ian M, Ménache Margaret G
Center for Health and the Environment, Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Cell Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, 95616-8615, USA.
Res Rep Health Eff Inst. 2008 Oct(135):3-41; discussion 43-52.
Particulate matter (PM*) has been associated with a variety of adverse health effects, primarily involving the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Researchers continue to investigate biologic mechanisms that may explain how exposure to PM exacerbates or directly causes adverse effects. Particle composition may play a critical role in these effects. In this study we used a diffusion flame system to generate ultrafine iron, soot, and iron combined with soot particles and exposed young adult and neonatal rats to different compositions of these particles. Young adult rats inhaled all three PM compositions on three consecutive days for 6 hours per day. Exposure to soot PM at 250 microg/m3 or to iron PM at 57 microg/m3 demonstrated no adverse respiratory effects. However, we observed mild pulmonary stress when the iron concentration was increased to 90 microg/m3. The most striking effects resulted when the rats inhaled PM composed of iron (45 microg/m3) combined with soot particles (total mass 250 microg/m3). This type of exposure produced significant indicators of oxidative stress, signs of inflammation, and increases in the levels of cytochrome P450 isozymes in the lungs. Repeated three-day exposure of neonatal rats to soot and iron particles in the second and the fourth weeks of life produced significant oxidative stress (elevations in oxidized and reduced glutathione) and ferritin induction. Neonatal rats exposed to PM in the second week of life also had a subtle but significant cell proliferation reduction in the centriacinar regions of the lungs. These findings suggest that iron combined with soot PM can lead to changes in the respiratory tract not found with exposure to iron or soot PM alone at similar concentrations. Unique effects in the neonate suggest that age may play an important role in susceptibility to inhaled particles.
颗粒物(PM*)已被证实与多种不良健康影响相关,主要涉及心血管和呼吸系统。研究人员持续探究可能解释暴露于PM如何加剧或直接导致不良影响的生物学机制。颗粒成分可能在这些影响中起关键作用。在本研究中,我们使用扩散火焰系统生成超细铁颗粒、碳黑颗粒以及铁与碳黑的复合颗粒,并将成年幼鼠和新生大鼠暴露于这些颗粒的不同成分中。成年幼鼠连续三天每天吸入这三种PM成分,每次6小时。暴露于250微克/立方米的碳黑PM或57微克/立方米的铁PM未显示出不良呼吸影响。然而,当铁浓度增加到90微克/立方米时,我们观察到了轻度的肺部应激。当大鼠吸入由铁(45微克/立方米)与碳黑颗粒(总质量250微克/立方米)组成的PM时,产生的影响最为显著。这种暴露产生了氧化应激的显著指标、炎症迹象以及肺中细胞色素P450同工酶水平的升高。在新生大鼠生命的第二和第四周,对其进行为期三天的碳黑和铁颗粒重复暴露,产生了显著的氧化应激(氧化型和还原型谷胱甘肽升高)以及铁蛋白诱导。在生命第二周暴露于PM的新生大鼠在肺的终末细支气管区域也有细微但显著的细胞增殖减少。这些发现表明,铁与碳黑复合PM可导致呼吸道出现单独暴露于类似浓度的铁或碳黑PM时未发现的变化。新生儿中的独特影响表明年龄可能在吸入颗粒易感性中起重要作用。