The brain appears to be a target of air pollution. This study aimed to further ascertain behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of our previously observed preference for immediate reward (Allen, J. L., Conrad, K., Oberdorster, G., Johnston, C. J., Sleezer, B., and Cory-Slechta, D. A. (2013). Developmental exposure to concentrated ambient particles and preference for immediate reward in mice. Environ. Health Perspect. 121, 32-38), a phenotype consistent with impulsivity, in mice developmentally exposed to inhaled ultrafine particles. It examined the impact of postnatal and/or adult concentrated ambient ultrafine particles (CAPS) or filtered air on another behavior thought to reflect impulsivity, Fixed interval (FI) schedule-controlled performance, and extended the assessment to learning/memory (novel object recognition (NOR)), and locomotor activity to assist in understanding behavioral mechanisms of action. In addition, levels of brain monoamines and amino acids, and markers of glial presence and activation (GFAP, IBA-1) were assessed in mesocorticolimbic brain regions mediating these cognitive functions. This design produced four treatment groups/sex of postnatal/adult exposure: Air/Air, Air/CAPS, CAPS/Air, and CAPS/CAPS. FI performance was adversely influenced by CAPS/Air in males, but by Air/CAPS in females, effects that appeared to reflect corresponding changes in brain mesocorticolimbic dopamine/glutamate systems that mediate FI performance. Both sexes showed impaired short-term memory on the NOR. Mechanistically, cortical and hippocampal changes in amino acids raised the potential for excitotoxicity, and persistent glial activation was seen in frontal cortex and corpus callosum of both sexes. Collectively, neurodevelopment and/or adulthood CAPS can produce enduring and sex-dependent neurotoxicity. Although mechanisms of these effects remain to be fully elucidated, findings suggest that neurodevelopment and/or adulthood air pollution exposure may represent a significant underexplored risk factor for central nervous system diseases/disorders and thus a significant public health threat even beyond current appreciation.
Fibrosis, characterized by the accumulation of collagen, is a consequence of a chronic inflammatory response. The purpose of this study was to determine if tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) and IL-1 beta mRNA expression are altered acutely after irradiation, during the so-called "latent" phase of pulmonary injury, and to examine if these alterations persist through the development of pneumonitis and fibrosis. Further, we wished to determine if these changes differ between two strains of mice which vary in their sensitivity to radiation. Fibrosis-sensitive (C57BL/6) and fibrosis-resistant (C3H/HeJ) mice were irradiated with a single dose of 5 or 12.5 Gy to the thorax. Total lung RNA was prepared and immobilized by slot blotting and hybridized with radiolabeled cDNA probes encoding for TNF-alpha, IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta. Autoradiographic data were quantified by video densitometry and results normalized to a control probe encoding for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. It was found that TNF-alpha mRNA levels were increased in C57BL/6 mice at days 1 and 7 postirradiation after 5 Gy and day 14 postirradiation after both 5 and 12.5 Gy, and IL-1 alpha mRNA levels were increased in C57BL/6 mice at days 56, 112 and 182 postirradiation after both 5 and 12.5 Gy, and IL-1 beta mRNA levels in the C3H/HeJ mice were increased at days 56 and 182 postirradiation after 12.5 Gy. In summary, these studies demonstrated early and persistent alterations in TNF-alpha, IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta mRNA levels even at the lower dose (5 Gy). The temporal relationship between the elevation of these cytokines and the strain-dependent variation in fibrosis response suggests that IL-1 alpha and TNF-alpha contribute to the radiation-induced component of pulmonary fibrosis, whereas IL-1 beta may have a protective function.
Clara cell secretory protein (CCSP) is an abundant component of the extracellular lining fluid of airways. Even though the in vivo function of CCSP is unknown, in vitro studies support a potential role of CCSP in the control of inflammatory responses. CCSP-deficient mice (CCSP -/-) were generated to investigate the in vivo function of this protein (13). In this study, we used hyperoxia exposure as a model to investigate phenotypic consequences of CCSP deficiency following acute lung injury. The pathologic response of the mouse lung to hyperoxia, and recovery of the lung, include inflammatory cell infiltrate and edema. Continuous exposure to > 95% O2 was associated with significantly reduced survival time among CCSP -/- mice as compared with strain-, age-, and sex-matched wild-type control mice. Differences in survival were associated with early onset of lung edema in CCSP -/- mice as compared with wild-type controls. To further investigate these differences in response, mice were exposed to > 95% O2 for either 48 h or 68 h with one group receiving 68 h of hyperoxia followed by room-air recovery. Lung RNA was characterized for changes in the abundance of cytokine messenger RNA (mRNA) using a ribonuclease (RNase) protection assay. After 68 h of hyperoxia, interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-1beta, and IL-3 mRNAs were 14-, 3-, and 2.5-fold higher, respectively, in CCSP -/- mice than in similarly exposed wild-type control mice. Increased expression of IL-1beta mRNA in hyperoxia-exposed CCSP -/- mice was localized principally within the lung parenchyma, suggesting that the effects of CCSP deficiency were not confined to the airway epithelium. We conclude that CCSP deficiency results in increased sensitivity to hyperoxia-induced lung injury as measured by increased mortality, early onset of lung edema, and induction of proinflammatory cytokine mRNAs.
Chronic inhalation of crystalline silica can produce lung tumors in rats whereas this has not been shown for amorphous silica. At present the mechanisms underlying this rat lung tumor response are unknown, although a significant role for chronic inflammation and cell proliferation has been postulated. To examine the processes that may contribute to the development of rat lung tumors after silica exposure, we characterized the effects of subchronic inhalation of amorphous and crystalline silica in rats. Rats were exposed for 6 h/day, on 5 days/week, for up to 13 weeks to 3 mg/m(3) crystalline or 50 mg/m(3) amorphous silica. The effects on the lung were characterized after 6.5 and 13 weeks of exposure as well as after 3 and 8 months of recovery. Exposure concentrations were selected to induce high pulmonary inflammatory-cell responses by both compounds. Endpoints characterized after silica exposure included mutation in the HPRT gene of isolated alveolar cells in an ex vivo assay, changes in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid markers of cellular and biochemical lung injury and inflammation, expression of mRNA for the chemokine MIP-2, and detection of oxidative DNA damage. Lung burdens of silica were also determined. After 13 weeks of exposure, lavage neutrophils were increased from 0.26% (controls) to 47 and 55% of total lavaged cells for crystalline and amorphous silica, with significantly greater lavage neutrophil numbers after amorphous silica (9.3 x 10(7) PMNs) compared to crystalline silica (6.5 x 10(7) PMNs). Lung burdens were 819 and 882 microg for crystalline and amorphous silica, respectively. BAL fluid levels of LDH as an indicator of cytotoxicity were twice as high for amorphous silica compared to those of crystalline silica, at the end of exposure. All parameters remained increased for crystalline silica and decreased rapidly for amorphous silica in the 8-month recovery period. Increased MIP-2 expression was observed at the end of the exposure period for both amorphous and crystalline silica. After 8 months of recovery, those markers remained elevated in crystalline silica-exposed rats, whereas amorphous silica-exposed rats were not significantly different from controls. A significant increase in HPRT mutation frequency in alveolar epithelial cells was detected immediately after 13 weeks of exposure to crystalline, but not to amorphous silica. A significant increase in TUNEL staining was detected in macrophages and terminal bronchiolar epithelial cells of amorphous silica-exposed rats at the end of the exposure period; however, crystalline silica produced far less staining. The observation that genotoxic effects in alveolar epithelial cells occurred only after crystalline but not amorphous silica exposure, despite a high degree of inflammatory-cell response after subchronic exposure to both types of silica, suggests that in addition to an inflammatory response, particle biopersistence, solubility, and direct or indirect epithelial cell cytotoxicity may be key factors for the induction of either mutagenic event...
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