High-volume samples of ambient air were collected by glass-fiber filter (particulate) and XAD-2 resin (vapor) from three locations in Finland: two cities and a rural area. Samples were analyzed for polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) and selected other polynuclear compounds. Genotoxicity of the samples was assayed in the Ames Salmonellalmicrosome test and sister chromatid exchange assay before and after fractionation into four fractions of increasing polarity. The ratio of PAH in the vapor and particulate phases of the samples varied considerably with the season, and the scavenging effect of snow and rain was as well clearly demonstrated. The rural samples showed minimal or no genotoxic activity, whereas at the urban sites not only the particulate-phase but also the vapor-phase samples were mutagenic. The genotoxicity was mainly associated with the most polar fractions of both phases. Studies with the nitroreductase-deficient Salmonella strain TA98NR indicated that, in the urban air samples collected in winter, a considerable part of the mutagenicity detected in the Ames test was due to NO2-substituted compounds. Traffic is suggested to be the major determinant for the genotoxic activity in the ambient air.
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