Institute of Hazard, Risk & Resilience, Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, Science Labs, Durham, DH1 3LE, United Kingdom; BioNanomaterials group, Adolphe Merkle Institute, University of Fribourg, Chemin des Verdiers 4, 1700, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Institute of Hazard, Risk & Resilience, Department of Earth Sciences, Durham University, Science Labs, Durham, DH1 3LE, United Kingdom.
Environ Pollut. 2018 Jul;238:977-987. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.01.115. Epub 2018 Feb 16.
Communities resident in urban areas located near active volcanoes can experience volcanic ash exposures during, and following, an eruption, in addition to sustained exposures to high concentrations of anthropogenic air pollutants (e.g., vehicle exhaust emissions). Inhalation of anthropogenic pollution is known to cause the onset of, or exacerbate, respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. It is further postulated similar exposure to volcanic ash can also affect such disease states. Understanding of the impact of combined exposure of volcanic ash and anthropogenic pollution to human health, however, remains limited. The aim of this study was to assess the biological impact of combined exposure to respirable volcanic ash (from Soufrière Hills volcano (SHV), Montserrat and Chaitén volcano (ChV), Chile; representing different magmatic compositions and eruption styles) and freshly-generated complete exhaust from a gasoline vehicle. A multicellular human lung model (an epithelial cell-layer composed of A549 alveolar type II-like cells complemented with human blood monocyte-derived macrophages and dendritic cells cultured at the air-liquid interface) was exposed to diluted exhaust (1:10) continuously for 6 h, followed by immediate exposure to the ash as a dry powder (0.54 ± 0.19 μg/cm and 0.39 ± 0.09 μg/cm for SHV and ChV ash, respectively). After an 18 h incubation, cells were exposed again for 6 h to diluted exhaust, and a final 18 h incubation (at 37 °C and 5% CO). Cell cultures were then assessed for cytotoxic, oxidative stress and (pro-)inflammatory responses. Results indicate that, at all tested (sub-lethal) concentrations, co-exposures with both ash samples induced no significant expression of genes associated with oxidative stress (HMOX1, NQO1) or production of (pro-)inflammatory markers (IL-1β, IL-8, TNF-α) at the gene and protein levels. In summary, considering the employed experimental conditions, combined exposure of volcanic ash and gasoline vehicle exhaust has a limited short-term biological impact to an advanced lung cell in vitro model.
居住在靠近活火山的城市地区的社区可能会在喷发期间和喷发后暴露于火山灰中,此外还会持续暴露于高浓度的人为空气污染物(例如,车辆废气排放)中。吸入人为污染物已知会导致呼吸道和心血管疾病的发作或加重。进一步推测,类似的火山灰暴露也可能影响这些疾病状态。然而,对于火山灰和人为污染的综合暴露对人类健康的影响的理解仍然有限。本研究的目的是评估吸入可呼吸的火山灰(来自蒙特塞拉特的苏弗里耶尔山火山(SHV)和智利的恰特恩火山(ChV);代表不同的岩浆成分和喷发类型)和新生成的完整汽油车辆废气的联合暴露对人体的生物影响。使用多细胞人肺模型(由肺泡 II 型样 A549 细胞组成的上皮细胞层,辅以在气液界面培养的人血单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞和树突状细胞)连续暴露于稀释的废气(1:10)6 小时,然后立即暴露于干粉状的火山灰(SHV 和 ChV 火山灰分别为 0.54±0.19μg/cm 和 0.39±0.09μg/cm)。孵育 18 小时后,细胞再次暴露于稀释的废气中 6 小时,然后进行最后 18 小时孵育(在 37°C 和 5%CO 下)。然后评估细胞培养物的细胞毒性、氧化应激和(前)炎症反应。结果表明,在所有测试的(亚致死)浓度下,两种火山灰样品的共同暴露在基因和蛋白质水平上均未诱导与氧化应激(HMOX1、NQO1)相关的基因或(前)炎症标志物(IL-1β、IL-8、TNF-α)的表达。总的来说,考虑到所采用的实验条件,火山灰和汽油车废气的联合暴露对体外高级肺细胞模型具有有限的短期生物学影响。