Microbial biomass, community structure and activity were determined in the subsurface horizons of four contrasting soil types common to Alabama. Biomass and community structure were determined by analyzing the fatty acids of the extractable phospholipids. Activity was estimated by measuring the rate of enzymatic hydrolysis of fluorescein diacetate (FDA). In all four soils, biomass and activity declined with increasing depth; however, the magnitude and pattern of this decline varied as a function of soil type. Biomass concentrations in the lower Ap horizon ranged from 8.2 to 18.0 nmoles phospholipid/g dry wt soil. In the deepest subsoil horizons, the range was 0.0085 to 0.059 nmoles phospholipid/g dry wt soil. The rate of FDA hydrolysis was highly correlated with biomass (r=0.90). Polyenoic fatty acids, which are present only in cukaryotic microorganisms, were found in all horizons; however, their relative abundance differed as a function of soil type. Stepwise regression analysis revealed that soil characteristics could explain 89 and 82% of the variation in biomass and activity, respectively. The results indicated that the vertical distribution of microorganisms in a soil profile differs greatly as a function of soil type. Hence, soil type may be an important determinant as to whether potential ground‐water pollutants are biodegraded as they pass through the unsaturated zone of a soil profile.
1,3-Butadiene (BD), a chemical used extensively in the production of styrene-butadiene rubber, is carcinogenic in Sprague-Dawley rats and B6C3F1 mice. Chronic inhalation studies revealed profound species differences in the potency and organ-site specificity of BD carcinogenesis between rats and mice. BD is a potent carcinogen in mice and a weak carcinogen in rats. Previous studies from our laboratory and others have shown marked differences between rats and mice in the metabolism of BD, which may account for species differences in carcinogenicity. The purpose of the present study was to examine the production and disposition of two mutagenic BD metabolites, butadiene monoepoxide (BDO) and butadiene diepoxide (BDO2), in blood and other tissues of rats and mice during and following inhalation exposures to a target concentration of 62.5 p.p.m. BD. BDO was increased above background in blood, bone marrow, heart, lung, fat, spleen and thymus tissues of mice after 2 h and 4 h exposures to BD. In rats, levels of BDO were increased in blood, fat, spleen and thymus tissues. No increases in BDO were observed in rat lungs. BDO2, the more mutagenic of the two epoxides, was increased in the blood of rats and mice at 2 and 4 h after initiation of exposure to BD. In mice, BDO2 was detected in all tissues examined immediately following the 4 h exposure. This metabolite was detected in heart, lung, fat, spleen and thymus of rats, but at levels 40- to 160-fold lower than those seen in mice. Immediately after the 4 h exposure, blood levels of BDO2 were 204 +/- 15 pmol/g for mice but were 41-fold lower for rats. In the sensitive mouse target organs, heart and lungs, levels of BDO2 exceeded BDO levels immediately after the exposure. This study shows that the levels of BD epoxides are markedly greater in the mouse BD target organs. The high concentrations of BDO2 in these organs suggest that this compound may be particularly important in BD-induced carcinogenesis. Thus, although BD is oxidatively metabolized by similar metabolic pathways in rats and mice, the substantial quantitative differences in tissue levels of mutagenic epoxides between species may be responsible for the increased sensitivity of mice to BD-induced carcinogenicity.
Enzymes of the nasal tissue, one of the first tissues to contact inhaled toxicants, are relatively resistant to induction by traditional inducers. Because tobacco smoke has been shown to induce cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1) in rat and human lung tissue, we hypothesized that it would also alter levels of xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes in nasal mucosae. In the present study, the effect of mainstream cigarette smoke (MCS) on nasal CYP1A1, CYP1A2 and CYP2B1/2 was explored. Four groups of 30 F344 rats were exposed to MCS (100 mg total particulate matter/m3) or filtered air for 2 or 8 weeks. Western analysis of microsomes from nasal tissue of MCS-exposed rats showed an induction of CYP1A1 in respiratory and olfactory mucosae, as well as liver, kidney and lung. Relative to controls, CYP1A2 levels increased slightly in the liver and olfactory mucosa. CYP2B1/2, which increased in the liver, appeared to decrease in upper and lower respiratory tissues. Little to no immunoreactivity with CYP1A1 antibody was observed in fixed nasal sections of control rats, yet intense immunoreactivity was seen in epithelia throughout the nasal cavity of MCS-exposed rats. Ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase activity (associated with CYP1A1/2) decreased approximately 2-fold in olfactory mucosa, but increased in non-nasal tissues of rats exposed to MCS. Methoxy- and pentoxyresorufin O-dealkylase activities (associated with CYP1A2 and CYP2B1/2, respectively) decreased in olfactory and respiratory mucosae, as well as lung (CYP2B1/2), yet increased in liver. These data suggest that xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymines of the nasal mucosae may be regulated differently than other tissues.
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