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Published in: Cardiovascular Toxicology 3/2020

01-06-2020

Vehicular Particulate Matter (PM) Characteristics Impact Vascular Outcomes Following Inhalation

Authors: Katherine E. Zychowski, Christina R. Steadman Tyler, Bethany Sanchez, Molly Harmon, June Liu, Hammad Irshad, Jacob D. McDonald, Barry E. Bleske, Matthew J. Campen

Published in: Cardiovascular Toxicology | Issue 3/2020

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Abstract

Roadside proximity and exposure to mixed vehicular emissions (MVE) have been linked to adverse pulmonary and vascular outcomes. However, because of the complex nature of the contribution of particulate matter (PM) versus gases, it is difficult to decipher the precise causative factors regarding PM and the copollutant gaseous fraction. To this end, C57BL/6 and apolipoprotein E knockout mice (ApoE−/−) were exposed to either filtered air (FA), fine particulate (FP), FP+gases (FP+G), ultrafine particulate (UFP), or UFP+gases (UFP+G). Two different timeframes were employed: 1-day (acute) or 30-day (subchronic) exposures. Examined biological endpoints included aortic vasoreactivity, aortic lesion quantification, and aortic mRNA expression. Impairments in vasorelaxation were observed following acute exposure to FP+G in C57BL/6 animals and FP, UFP, and UFP+G in ApoE−/− animals. These effects were completely abrogated or markedly reduced following subchronic exposure. Aortic lesion quantification in ApoE−/− animals indicated a significant increase in atheroma size in the UFP-, FP-, and FP+G-exposed groups. Additionally, ApoE−/− mice demonstrated a significant fold increase in TNFα expression following FP+G exposure and ET-1 following UFP exposure. Interestingly, C57BL/6 aortic gene expression varied widely across exposure groups. TNFα decreased significantly following FP exposure and CCL-5 decreased in the UFP-, FP-, and FP+G-exposed groups. Conversely, ET-1, CCL-2, and CXCL-1 were all significantly upregulated in the FP+G group. These findings suggest that gas–particle interactions may play a role in vascular toxicity, but the contribution of surface area is not clear.
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Metadata
Title
Vehicular Particulate Matter (PM) Characteristics Impact Vascular Outcomes Following Inhalation
Authors
Katherine E. Zychowski
Christina R. Steadman Tyler
Bethany Sanchez
Molly Harmon
June Liu
Hammad Irshad
Jacob D. McDonald
Barry E. Bleske
Matthew J. Campen
Publication date
01-06-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Cardiovascular Toxicology / Issue 3/2020
Print ISSN: 1530-7905
Electronic ISSN: 1559-0259
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12012-019-09546-5

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