Erdei Esther, O'Donald Elena R, Luo Li, Enright Kendra, O'Leary Marcia, MacKenzie Debra, Doyle John, Eggers Margaret, Keil Deborah, Lewis Johnnye, Henderson Jeffrey A, Rubin Robert L
Community Environmental Health Program, Dept. of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of New Mexico, Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Community Environmental Health Program, Dept. of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of New Mexico, Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
J Autoimmun. 2024 Dec;149:103117. doi: 10.1016/j.jaut.2023.103117. Epub 2023 Oct 7.
Metals contaminants of the environment from mine waste have been implicated as contributing agents in autoimmune disease. The current study compares metals and autoimmunity in two Tribal communities residing in the Black Hills and the Bighorn Mountains geographical regions that are scattered with extant hard rock mines. With documented drinking water contamination in both communities, in vivo levels of more than half of the measured serum and urine metals differed between the two communities and were substantially different from their national median values. Serum autoantibodies associated with systemic autoimmune disease were rare or at low-level, but antibodies to denatured (single-stranded) DNA and thyroid-specific autoantibodies were commonly elevated, especially in women. A three-tier statistical modeling process was carried out to examine individual metals exposure as predictors of autoantibody levels. For the most part only weak positive associations between individual metals and systemic autoantibodies were found, although univariate quantile regression analysis showed positive statistical associations of serum lead and antimony with anti-chromatin and anti-histone autoantibodies. Using age and gender-adjusted multivariable statistical models, metals did not predict anti-thyroglobulin or -thyroid peroxidase significantly and metals were generally negative predictors of the other autoantibodies. Overall these results suggest that elevated levels of environmental metals and metalloids in these communities may result in suppression of autoantibodies associated with systemic autoimmune disease.
来自矿山废弃物的环境金属污染物被认为是自身免疫性疾病的致病因素。本研究比较了居住在黑山和大角山地理区域的两个部落社区的金属与自身免疫情况,这两个区域散布着现存的硬岩矿。两个社区都有饮用水污染的记录,在两个社区中,超过半数被测血清和尿液金属的体内水平存在差异,且与全国中位数有显著不同。与系统性自身免疫性疾病相关的血清自身抗体很少见或水平较低,但变性(单链)DNA抗体和甲状腺特异性自身抗体通常升高,尤其是在女性中。进行了一个三层统计建模过程,以检验个体金属暴露作为自身抗体水平预测指标的情况。虽然单变量分位数回归分析显示血清铅和锑与抗染色质和抗组蛋白自身抗体存在正相关,但在大多数情况下,仅发现个体金属与系统性自身抗体之间存在微弱的正相关。使用年龄和性别调整后的多变量统计模型,金属不能显著预测抗甲状腺球蛋白或抗甲状腺过氧化物酶,并且金属通常是其他自身抗体的负预测指标。总体而言,这些结果表明,这些社区中环境金属和类金属水平升高可能会导致与系统性自身免疫性疾病相关的自身抗体受到抑制。