Hazard Identification Division, Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau, Health Canada, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0K9, Canada.
Toxicol Sci. 2013 Sep;135(1):169-81. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kft137. Epub 2013 Jun 26.
Recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated associations between air pollution and adverse effects that extend beyond respiratory and cardiovascular disease, including low birth weight, appendicitis, stroke, and neurological/neurobehavioural outcomes (e.g., neurodegenerative disease, cognitive decline, depression, and suicide). To gain insight into mechanisms underlying such effects, we mapped gene profiles in the lungs, heart, liver, kidney, spleen, cerebral hemisphere, and pituitary of male Fischer-344 rats immediately and 24h after a 4-h exposure by inhalation to particulate matter (0, 5, and 50mg/m(3) EHC-93 urban particles) and ozone (0, 0.4, and 0.8 ppm). Pollutant exposure provoked differential expression of genes involved in a number of pathways, including antioxidant response, xenobiotic metabolism, inflammatory signalling, and endothelial dysfunction. The mRNA profiles, while exhibiting some interorgan and pollutant-specific differences, were remarkably similar across organs for a set of genes, including increased expression of redox/glucocorticoid-sensitive genes and decreased expression of inflammatory genes, suggesting a possible hormonal effect. Pollutant exposure increased plasma levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone and the glucocorticoid corticosterone, confirming activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and there was a corresponding increase in markers of glucocorticoid activity. Although effects were transient and presumably represent an adaptive response to acute exposure in these healthy animals, chronic activation and inappropriate regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis are associated with adverse neurobehavioral, metabolic, immune, developmental, and cardiovascular effects. The experimental data are consistent with epidemiological associations of air pollutants with extrapulmonary health outcomes and suggest a mechanism through which such health effects may be induced.
最近的流行病学研究表明,空气污染与超出呼吸和心血管疾病范围的不良影响之间存在关联,包括低出生体重、阑尾炎、中风以及神经/神经行为学结果(如神经退行性疾病、认知能力下降、抑郁和自杀)。为了深入了解这些影响的潜在机制,我们在雄性 Fischer-344 大鼠吸入颗粒物(0、5 和 50mg/m(3) EHC-93 城市颗粒)和臭氧(0、0.4 和 0.8ppm)后立即和 24 小时内,对其肺部、心脏、肝脏、肾脏、脾脏、大脑半球和脑垂体中的基因谱进行了映射。污染物暴露引发了参与多种途径的基因的差异表达,包括抗氧化反应、外来物质代谢、炎症信号和内皮功能障碍。尽管基因表达谱在不同器官和污染物之间存在一些差异,但在一组基因中,包括氧化还原/糖皮质激素敏感基因的表达增加和炎症基因的表达减少,器官之间的 mRNA 谱非常相似,这表明可能存在激素作用。污染物暴露增加了促肾上腺皮质激素和糖皮质激素皮质酮的血浆水平,证实了下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴的激活,并且糖皮质激素活性的标志物也相应增加。虽然这些影响是短暂的,并且可能代表这些健康动物对急性暴露的适应性反应,但下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺轴的慢性激活和不当调节与不良的神经行为、代谢、免疫、发育和心血管影响有关。实验数据与空气污染物与肺外健康结果的流行病学关联一致,并提出了一种可能导致这些健康影响的机制。