Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina27599, United States.
The Institute for Environmental Health Solutions, Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina27599, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2022 Dec 6;56(23):17131-17142. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.2c06043. Epub 2022 Nov 18.
The prevalence of wildfires continues to grow globally with exposures resulting in increased disease risk. Characterizing these health risks remains difficult due to the wide landscape of exposures that can result from different burn conditions and fuel types. This study tested the hypothesis that biomass smoke exposures from variable fuels and combustion conditions group together based on similar transcriptional response profiles, informing which wildfire-relevant exposures may be considered as a group for health risk evaluations. Mice (female CD-1) were exposed via oropharyngeal aspiration to equal mass biomass smoke condensates produced from flaming or smoldering burns of eucalyptus, peat, pine, pine needles, or red oak species. Lung transcriptomic signatures were used to calculate transcriptomic similarity scores across exposures, which informed exposure groupings. Exposures from flaming peat, flaming eucalyptus, and smoldering eucalyptus induced the greatest responses, with flaming peat grouping with the pro-inflammatory agent lipopolysaccharide. Smoldering red oak and smoldering peat induced the least transcriptomic response. Groupings paralleled pulmonary toxicity markers, though they were better substantiated by higher data dimensionality and resolution provided through -omic-based evaluation. Interestingly, groupings based on smoke chemistry signatures differed from transcriptomic/toxicity-based groupings. Wildfire-relevant exposure groupings yield insights into risk assessment strategies to ultimately protect public health.
野火的发生率在全球范围内持续增长,由此导致的暴露会增加疾病风险。由于不同的燃烧条件和燃料类型可能导致广泛的暴露,因此很难描述这些健康风险。本研究检验了这样一个假设,即不同燃料和燃烧条件下产生的生物质烟雾暴露可以根据相似的转录反应谱聚集在一起,这为哪些与野火相关的暴露可以被视为一个组进行健康风险评估提供了信息。通过口咽吸入,将等量的生物质烟雾冷凝物暴露于雌性 CD-1 小鼠,这些烟雾冷凝物是由桉树、泥炭、松树、松针或红橡木物种的明火或闷烧燃烧产生的。使用肺转录组特征来计算跨暴露的转录组相似性得分,从而告知暴露分组。明火泥炭、明火桉树和闷烧桉树的暴露引起的反应最大,明火泥炭与促炎剂脂多糖聚集在一起。闷烧红橡木和闷烧泥炭引起的转录组反应最小。分组与肺毒性标志物平行,尽管通过基于组学的评估提供的更高数据维度和分辨率更好地证实了这一点。有趣的是,基于烟雾化学特征的分组与基于转录组/毒性的分组不同。与野火相关的暴露分组为风险评估策略提供了深入了解,最终可以保护公众健康。