Holzhausen Elizabeth A, Tan Youran, Young Nathan, Jones Roshonda B, Tang Ziyin, Sarnat Jeremy A, Lurmann Fredrick, Chang Howard H, Tran ViLinh, Jones Dean P, Goran Michael I, Dunlop Anne L, Liang Donghai, Alderete Tanya L
Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, United States.
Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2025 Sep 16;59(36):19131-19145. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.5c04955. Epub 2025 Sep 4.
Exposure to traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) during pregnancy has been linked with adverse health outcomes, yet the biological mechanisms remain poorly understood. High-resolution metabolomics offers a promising approach to examine how TRAP influences infant health. However, few studies have focused on Black and Latino populations, who are disproportionately exposed to TRAP. This study aims to assess the association between prenatal exposure to TRAP and the infant metabolome in two distinct, geographically independent populations: the prospective Atlanta African American Cohort and the Southern California Mother's Milk Study (MMS). This study provides novel evidence that prenatal nitrogen oxides (NO), a major component of TRAP, are associated with perturbations in the infant circulating and fecal metabolome during the first month of life. We found that prenatal NO exposure was linked with the intensity of 8 and 16 level-1 metabolites in the ATL AA and MMS, respectively. Metabolites associated with NO included several involved in lipid and xenobiotic metabolism. In analyses including untargeted metabolic features, we found that prenatal NO was associated with perturbations in metabolic pathways including oxidative stress and inflammatory response. These findings provide novel insight into the biological mechanisms by which prenatal TRAP may influence infant health and development.
孕期暴露于交通相关空气污染(TRAP)与不良健康后果有关,但生物学机制仍知之甚少。高分辨率代谢组学为研究TRAP如何影响婴儿健康提供了一种很有前景的方法。然而,很少有研究关注黑人和拉丁裔人群,他们不成比例地暴露于TRAP中。本研究旨在评估两个不同的、地理上独立的人群——前瞻性亚特兰大非裔美国人队列和南加州母乳研究(MMS)中,产前暴露于TRAP与婴儿代谢组之间的关联。本研究提供了新的证据,表明产前氮氧化物(NO)作为TRAP的主要成分,与婴儿出生后第一个月循环和粪便代谢组的扰动有关。我们发现,产前NO暴露分别与亚特兰大非裔美国人队列和MMS中8种和16种一级代谢物的强度有关。与NO相关的代谢物包括几种参与脂质和异生物代谢的物质。在包括非靶向代谢特征的分析中,我们发现产前NO与包括氧化应激和炎症反应在内的代谢途径的扰动有关。这些发现为产前TRAP可能影响婴儿健康和发育的生物学机制提供了新的见解。