Cargando…

DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.

All organisms have the ability to respond and adapt to a myriad of environmental insults. The human respiratory epithelium, when exposed to oxidant gases in photochemical smog, is at risk of DNA damage and requires efficient cellular adaptative responses to resist the environmentally induced cell da...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Calderon-Garciduenas, L, Osnaya-Brizuela, N, Ramirez-Martinez, L, Villarreal-Calderon, A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8820583
_version_ 1782127575649222656
author Calderon-Garciduenas, L
Osnaya-Brizuela, N
Ramirez-Martinez, L
Villarreal-Calderon, A
author_facet Calderon-Garciduenas, L
Osnaya-Brizuela, N
Ramirez-Martinez, L
Villarreal-Calderon, A
author_sort Calderon-Garciduenas, L
collection PubMed
description All organisms have the ability to respond and adapt to a myriad of environmental insults. The human respiratory epithelium, when exposed to oxidant gases in photochemical smog, is at risk of DNA damage and requires efficient cellular adaptative responses to resist the environmentally induced cell damage. Ozone and its reaction products induce in vitro and in vivo DNA single strand breaks (SSBs) in respiratory epithelial cells and alveolar macrophages. To determine if exposure to a polluted atmosphere with ozone as the main criteria pollutant induces SSBs in nasal epithelium, we studied 139 volunteers, including a control population of 19 children and 13 adult males who lived in a low-polluted Pacific port, 69 males and 16 children who were permanent residents of Southwest Metropolitan Mexico City (SWMMC), and 22 young males newly arrived to SWMMC and followed for 12 weeks. Respiratory symptoms, nasal cytology and histopathology, cell viabilities, and single-cell gel electrophoresis were investigated. Atmospheric pollutant data were obtained from a fixed-site monitoring station. SWMMC volunteers spent >7 hr/day outdoors and all had upper respiratory symptoms. A significant difference in the numbers of DNA-damaged nasal cells was observed between control and chronically exposed subjects, both in children (p<0.00001) and in adults (p<0.01). SSBs in newly arrived subjects quickly increased upon arrival to the city, from 39.8 +/- 8.34% in the first week to 67.29 +/- 2.35 by week 2. Thereafter, the number of cells with SSBs remained stable in spite of the continuous increase in cumulative ozone, suggesting a threshold for cumulative DNA nasal damage. Exposure to a polluted urban atmosphere induces SSBs in human nasal respiratory epithelium, and nasal SSBs could serve as a biomarker of ozone exposure. Further, because DNA strand breaks are a threat to cell viability and genome integrity and appear to be a critical lesion responsible for p53 induction, nasal SSBs should be evaluated in ozone-exposed individuals.
format Text
id pubmed-1469271
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1996
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-14692712006-06-01 DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution. Calderon-Garciduenas, L Osnaya-Brizuela, N Ramirez-Martinez, L Villarreal-Calderon, A Environ Health Perspect Research Article All organisms have the ability to respond and adapt to a myriad of environmental insults. The human respiratory epithelium, when exposed to oxidant gases in photochemical smog, is at risk of DNA damage and requires efficient cellular adaptative responses to resist the environmentally induced cell damage. Ozone and its reaction products induce in vitro and in vivo DNA single strand breaks (SSBs) in respiratory epithelial cells and alveolar macrophages. To determine if exposure to a polluted atmosphere with ozone as the main criteria pollutant induces SSBs in nasal epithelium, we studied 139 volunteers, including a control population of 19 children and 13 adult males who lived in a low-polluted Pacific port, 69 males and 16 children who were permanent residents of Southwest Metropolitan Mexico City (SWMMC), and 22 young males newly arrived to SWMMC and followed for 12 weeks. Respiratory symptoms, nasal cytology and histopathology, cell viabilities, and single-cell gel electrophoresis were investigated. Atmospheric pollutant data were obtained from a fixed-site monitoring station. SWMMC volunteers spent >7 hr/day outdoors and all had upper respiratory symptoms. A significant difference in the numbers of DNA-damaged nasal cells was observed between control and chronically exposed subjects, both in children (p<0.00001) and in adults (p<0.01). SSBs in newly arrived subjects quickly increased upon arrival to the city, from 39.8 +/- 8.34% in the first week to 67.29 +/- 2.35 by week 2. Thereafter, the number of cells with SSBs remained stable in spite of the continuous increase in cumulative ozone, suggesting a threshold for cumulative DNA nasal damage. Exposure to a polluted urban atmosphere induces SSBs in human nasal respiratory epithelium, and nasal SSBs could serve as a biomarker of ozone exposure. Further, because DNA strand breaks are a threat to cell viability and genome integrity and appear to be a critical lesion responsible for p53 induction, nasal SSBs should be evaluated in ozone-exposed individuals. 1996-02 /pmc/articles/PMC1469271/ /pubmed/8820583 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Calderon-Garciduenas, L
Osnaya-Brizuela, N
Ramirez-Martinez, L
Villarreal-Calderon, A
DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title_full DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title_fullStr DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title_full_unstemmed DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title_short DNA strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
title_sort dna strand breaks in human nasal respiratory epithelium are induced upon exposure to urban pollution.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1469271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8820583
work_keys_str_mv AT calderongarciduenasl dnastrandbreaksinhumannasalrespiratoryepitheliumareinduceduponexposuretourbanpollution
AT osnayabrizuelan dnastrandbreaksinhumannasalrespiratoryepitheliumareinduceduponexposuretourbanpollution
AT ramirezmartinezl dnastrandbreaksinhumannasalrespiratoryepitheliumareinduceduponexposuretourbanpollution
AT villarrealcalderona dnastrandbreaksinhumannasalrespiratoryepitheliumareinduceduponexposuretourbanpollution