Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY 10010, USA.
Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY 10010, USA.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2020 Aug 1;400:115041. doi: 10.1016/j.taap.2020.115041. Epub 2020 May 17.
Respiratory ailments have plagued occupational and public health communities exposed to World Trade Center (WTC) dust since the September 11, 2001 attack on the Twin Towers in Lower Manhattan. We proposed that these ailments were proposed to be induced by inhalation exposure to WTC particulate matter (WTC), that was released during the collapse of the buildings and its subsequent resuspension during cleanup. We investigated this hypothesis using both an in vitro and an in vivo mouse intranasal (IN) exposure models to identify the inflammatory potential of WTC with specific emphasis on respiratory and endothelial tissue responses. The in vitro exposure studies found WTC exposure to be positively correlated with cytotoxicity and increased NO production in both BEAS-2B pulmonary epithelial cells and THP-1 macrophage cells. The in vivo C57BL/6 mouse studies found significant increases in inflammatory markers including increases in polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) influx into nasal and bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (NLF and BALF), as well as increased levels of total protein and cytokine/chemokines levels. Concurrently, NLF, BALF, and serum NO levels exhibited significant homeostatic temporal deviations as well as temporal myograohic aortic dysfunction in myography studies. Respiratory exposure to- and evidence -based retention of- WTC may have contributed to chronic systemic effects in exposed mice that r resembled to observed effects in WTC-exposed human populations. Collectively, these findings are reflective of WTC exposure and its effect(s) on respiratory and aortic tissues, highlighting potential dysfunctional pathways that may precipitate inflammatory events, while simultaneously altering homeostatic balances. The tight interplay between these balances, when chronically altered, may contribute to- or result in- chronically diseased pathological states.
自 2001 年 9 月 11 日曼哈顿下城的双塔遭到袭击以来,接触世界贸易中心(WTC)尘埃的职业和公共卫生界一直受到呼吸道疾病的困扰。我们提出,这些疾病是由于吸入 WTC 颗粒物(WTC)引起的,这些颗粒物是在建筑物倒塌时释放的,并在随后的清理过程中再次悬浮。我们使用体外和体内小鼠鼻腔(IN)暴露模型来研究这一假设,以确定 WTC 的炎症潜力,特别强调呼吸道和内皮组织的反应。体外暴露研究发现,WTC 暴露与 BEAS-2B 肺上皮细胞和 THP-1 巨噬细胞中的细胞毒性和一氧化氮(NO)生成增加呈正相关。体内 C57BL/6 小鼠研究发现,炎症标志物显著增加,包括鼻和支气管肺泡灌洗液(NLF 和 BALF)中多形核中性粒细胞(PMN)流入增加,以及总蛋白和细胞因子/趋化因子水平增加。同时,NLF、BALF 和血清 NO 水平表现出显著的动态平衡时间偏差,以及在肌电图研究中主动脉的动态肌功能障碍。呼吸暴露和基于证据的 WTC 保留可能导致暴露小鼠出现慢性全身效应,这些效应类似于暴露于 WTC 的人类人群中观察到的效应。总之,这些发现反映了 WTC 的暴露及其对呼吸和主动脉组织的影响,突出了可能引发炎症事件的潜在功能障碍途径,同时改变了动态平衡。这些平衡的紧密相互作用,如果长期改变,可能导致或导致慢性疾病病理状态。