Understanding the Early Biological Effects of Isoprene-Derived Particulate Matter Enhanced by Anthropogenic Pollutants.

J D Surratt, Y-H Lin, M Arashiro, W G Vizuete, Z Zhang, A Gold, I Jaspers, R C Fry
{"title":"Understanding the Early Biological Effects of Isoprene-Derived Particulate Matter Enhanced by Anthropogenic Pollutants.","authors":"J D Surratt,&nbsp;Y-H Lin,&nbsp;M Arashiro,&nbsp;W G Vizuete,&nbsp;Z Zhang,&nbsp;A Gold,&nbsp;I Jaspers,&nbsp;R C Fry","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Airborne fine particulate matter (PM<sub>2.5</sub>; particulate matter ≤ 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter) plays a key role in air quality, climate, and public health. Globally, the largest mass fraction of PM<sub>2.5</sub> is organic, dominated by secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formed from atmospheric oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Isoprene from vegetation is the most abundant nonmethane VOC emitted into Earth's atmosphere. Isoprene has been recently recognized as one of the major sources of global SOA production that is enhanced by the presence of anthropogenic pollutants, such as acidic sulfate derived from sulfur dioxide (SO<sub>2</sub>), through multiphase chemistry of its oxidation products. Considering the abundance of isoprene-derived SOA in the atmosphere, understanding mechanisms of adverse health effects through inhalation exposure is critical to mitigating its potential impact on public health. Although previous studies have examined the toxicological effects of certain isoprene-derived gas-phase oxidation products, to date, no systematic studies have examined the potential toxicological effects of isoprene-derived SOA, its constituents, or its SOA precursors on human lung cells.</p><p><strong>Specific aims: </strong>The overall objective of this study was to investigate the early biological effects of isoprene-derived SOA and its subtypes on BEAS-2B cells (a human bronchial epithelial cell line), with a particular focus on the alteration of oxidative stress- and inflammation-related genes. To achieve this objective, there were two specific aims.</p><p><p>1. Examine toxicity and early biological effects of SOA derived from the photochemical oxidation of isoprene, considering both urban and downwind-urban types of chemistry.</p><p><p>2. Examine toxicity and early biological effects of SOA derived directly from downstream oxidation products of isoprene (i.e., epoxides and hydroperoxides).</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>Isoprene-derived SOA was first generated by photooxidation of isoprene under natural sunlight in the presence of nitric oxide (NO) and acidified sulfate aerosols. Experiments were conducted in a 120-m<sup>3</sup> outdoor Teflon-film chamber located on the roof of the Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill). BEAS-2B cells were exposed to chamber- generated isoprene-derived SOA using the Electrostatic Aerosol in Vitro Exposure System (EAVES). This approach allowed us to generate atmospherically relevant compositions of isoprene-derived SOA and to examine its toxicity through in vitro exposures at an air-liquid interface, providing a more biologically relevant exposure model. Isoprene-derived SOA samples were also collected, concurrently with EAVES sampling, onto Teflon membrane filters for in vitro resuspension exposures and for analysis of aerosol chemical composition by gas chromatography/electron ionization-quadrupole mass spectrometry (GC/EI-MS) with prior trimethylsilylation and ultra-performance liquid-chromatography coupled to high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry equipped with electrospray ionization (UPLC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS). Isoprene-derived SOA samples were also analyzed by the dithiothreitol (DTT) assay in order to characterize their reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generation potential.</p><p><p>Organic synthesis of known isoprene-derived SOA precursors, which included isoprene epoxydiols (IEPOX), methacrylic acid epoxide (MAE), and isoprene-derived hydroxyhydroperoxides (ISOPOOH), was conducted in order to isolate major isoprene-derived SOA formation pathways from each other and to determine which of these pathways (or SOA types) is potentially more toxic. Since IEPOX and MAE produce SOA through multiphase chemistry onto acidic sulfate aerosol, dark reactive uptake experiments of IEPOX and MAE in the presence of acidic sulfate aerosol were performed in a 10-m<sup>3</sup> flexible Teflon indoor chamber at UNC-Chapel Hill. Since the generation of SOA from ISOPOOH (through a non-IEPOX route) requires a hydroxyl radical (•OH)-initiated oxidation, ozonolysis of tetramethylethylene (TME) was used to form the needed •OH radicals in the indoor chamber. The resultant low-volatility multifunctional hydroperoxides condensed onto nonacidified sulfate aerosol, yielding the ISOPOOH-derived SOA needed for exposures. Similar to the outdoor chamber SOAs, IEPOX, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOAs were collected onto Teflon membrane filters and were subsequently chemically characterized by GC/EI-MS and UPLC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS as well as for ROS-generation potential using the DTT assay. These filters were also used for resuspension in vitro exposures.</p><p><p>By conducting gene expression profiling, we provided mechanistic insights into the potential health effects of isoprene-derived SOA. First, gene expression profiling of 84 oxidative stress- and 249 inflammation-associated human genes was performed for cells exposed to isoprene-derived SOA generated in our outdoor chamber experiments in EAVES or by resuspension. Two pathway-focused panels were utilized for this purpose: (1) nCounter GX Human Inflammation Kit comprised of 249 human genes (NanoString), and (2) Human Oxidative Stress Plus RT2 Profiler PCR Array (Qiagen) comprised of 84 oxidative stress-associated genes. We compared the gene expression levels in cells exposed to SOA generated in an outdoor chamber from photochemical oxidation of isoprene in the presence of NO and acidified sulfate seed aerosol to cells exposed to a dark control mixture of isoprene, NO, and acidified sulfate seed aerosol to isolate the effects of the isoprene-derived SOA on the cells using the EAVES and resuspension exposure methods. Pathway-based analysis was performed for significantly altered genes using the ConsensusPathDB database, which is a database system for the integration of human gene functional interactions to provide biological pathway information for a gene set of interest. Pathway annotation was performed to provide biological pathway information for each gene set. The gene-gene interaction networks were constructed and visualized using the GeneMANIA Cytoscape app (version 3.4.1) to predict the putative function of altered genes. Lastly, isoprene-derived SOA collected onto filters was used in resuspension exposures to measure select inflammatory biomarkers, including interleukin 8 (<i>IL-8</i>) and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (<i>PTGS2</i>) genes, in BEAS-2B cells to ensure that effects observed from EAVES exposures were attributable to particle-phase organic products. Since EAVES and resuspension exposures compared well, gene expression profiling for IEPOX-, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOA were conducted using only resuspension exposures.</p><p><strong>Results and conclusions: </strong>Chemical characterization coupled with biological analyses show that atmospherically relevant compositions of isoprene-derived SOA alter the levels of 41 oxidative stress-related genes. Of the different composition types of isoprene-derived SOA, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOA altered the greatest number of genes, suggesting that carbonyl and hydroperoxide functional groups are oxidative stress promoters. Taken together, the different composition types accounted for 34 of the genes altered by the total isoprene-derived SOA mixture, while 7 remained unique to the total mixture exposures, indicating that there is either a synergistic effect of the different isoprene-derived SOA components or an unaccounted component in the mixture.</p><p><p>The high-oxides of nitrogen (NO<sub>x</sub>) regime, which yielded MAE- and methacrolein (MACR)-derived SOA, had a higher ROS-generation potential (as measured by the DTT assay) than the low- NO<sub>x</sub> regime, which included IEPOX- and isoprene-derived SOA. However, ISOPOOH-derived SOA, which also formed in the low- NO<sub>x</sub> regime, had the highest ROS-generation potential, similar to 1,4-naphthoquinone (1,4-NQ). This suggests that aerosol-phase organic peroxides contribute significantly to particulate matter (PM) oxidative potential. MAE- and MACR- derived SOA showed equal or greater ROS-generation potential than was reported in prior UNC-Chapel Hill studies on diesel exhaust PM, highlighting the importance of a comprehensive investigation of the toxicity of isoprene-derived SOA. Notably, ISOPOOH-derived SOA was one order of magnitude higher in ROS-generation potential than diesel exhaust particles previously examined at UNC-Chapel Hill. As an acellular assay, the DTT assay may not be predictive of oxidative stress; therefore, we also focused on the gene expression results from the cellular exposures.</p><p><p>We have demonstrated that the nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) and the redox-sensitive activation protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor networks have been significantly altered upon exposure to isoprene-derived SOA. The identification of Nrf2 pathway in cells exposed to isoprene-derived SOA is in accordance with our findings using the DTT assay, which measures the thiol reactivity of PM samples as a surrogate for their ROS-generation potential. Specifically, our results point to the cysteine-thiol modifications within cells that lead to activation of Nrf2-related gene expression.</p><p><p>However, based on our gene expression results showing no clear relationship between DTT activity and the number of altered oxidative stress-related genes, the DTT activity of isoprene-derived SOA may not be directly indicative of toxicity relative to other SOA types. While activation of Nrf2-associated genes has been identified with responses to oxidative stress and linked to traffic related air pollution exposure in both toxicological and epidemiological studies, their implicit involvement in this study suggests that activation of Nrf2-related gene expression may occur with exposures to all sorts of PM types.</p><p><p>By controlling the exposure time, method, and dose we demonstrated that among the SOA derived from previously identified individual precursors of isoprene-derived SOA, ISOPOOH-derived SOA alters more oxidative stress related genes than does IEPOX-derived SOA, but fewer than MAE-derived SOA. This suggests that the composition of MAE-derived SOA may be the greatest contributor to alterations of oxidative stress-related gene expression observed due to isoprene-derived SOA exposure. Further study on induced levels of protein expression and specific toxicological endpoints is necessary to determine if the observed gene expression changes lead to adverse health effects. In addition, such studies have implications for pollution-control strategies because NO<sub>x</sub> and SO<sub>2</sub> are controllable pollutants that can alter the composition of SOA, and in turn alter its effects on gene expression. The mass fraction of different components of atmospheric isoprene derived SOA should be considered, but altering the fraction of high- NO<sub>x</sub> isoprene-derived SOA (e.g., MAE derived SOA) may yield greater changes in gene expression than altering the fraction of low- NO<sub>x</sub> isoprene derived SOA types (ISOPOOH- or IEPOX-derived SOA). Finally, this study confirms that total isoprene-derived SOA alters the expression of a greater number of genes than does SOA derived from the tested precursors. This warrants further work to determine the underlying explanation for this observation, which may be uncharacterized components of isoprene-derived SOA or the potential for synergism between the studied components.</p>","PeriodicalId":74687,"journal":{"name":"Research report (Health Effects Institute)","volume":" 198","pages":"1-54"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7271660/pdf/hei-2019-198.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Research report (Health Effects Institute)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Airborne fine particulate matter (PM2.5; particulate matter ≤ 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter) plays a key role in air quality, climate, and public health. Globally, the largest mass fraction of PM2.5 is organic, dominated by secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formed from atmospheric oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Isoprene from vegetation is the most abundant nonmethane VOC emitted into Earth's atmosphere. Isoprene has been recently recognized as one of the major sources of global SOA production that is enhanced by the presence of anthropogenic pollutants, such as acidic sulfate derived from sulfur dioxide (SO2), through multiphase chemistry of its oxidation products. Considering the abundance of isoprene-derived SOA in the atmosphere, understanding mechanisms of adverse health effects through inhalation exposure is critical to mitigating its potential impact on public health. Although previous studies have examined the toxicological effects of certain isoprene-derived gas-phase oxidation products, to date, no systematic studies have examined the potential toxicological effects of isoprene-derived SOA, its constituents, or its SOA precursors on human lung cells.

Specific aims: The overall objective of this study was to investigate the early biological effects of isoprene-derived SOA and its subtypes on BEAS-2B cells (a human bronchial epithelial cell line), with a particular focus on the alteration of oxidative stress- and inflammation-related genes. To achieve this objective, there were two specific aims.

1. Examine toxicity and early biological effects of SOA derived from the photochemical oxidation of isoprene, considering both urban and downwind-urban types of chemistry.

2. Examine toxicity and early biological effects of SOA derived directly from downstream oxidation products of isoprene (i.e., epoxides and hydroperoxides).

Methods: Isoprene-derived SOA was first generated by photooxidation of isoprene under natural sunlight in the presence of nitric oxide (NO) and acidified sulfate aerosols. Experiments were conducted in a 120-m3 outdoor Teflon-film chamber located on the roof of the Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill). BEAS-2B cells were exposed to chamber- generated isoprene-derived SOA using the Electrostatic Aerosol in Vitro Exposure System (EAVES). This approach allowed us to generate atmospherically relevant compositions of isoprene-derived SOA and to examine its toxicity through in vitro exposures at an air-liquid interface, providing a more biologically relevant exposure model. Isoprene-derived SOA samples were also collected, concurrently with EAVES sampling, onto Teflon membrane filters for in vitro resuspension exposures and for analysis of aerosol chemical composition by gas chromatography/electron ionization-quadrupole mass spectrometry (GC/EI-MS) with prior trimethylsilylation and ultra-performance liquid-chromatography coupled to high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry equipped with electrospray ionization (UPLC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS). Isoprene-derived SOA samples were also analyzed by the dithiothreitol (DTT) assay in order to characterize their reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generation potential.

Organic synthesis of known isoprene-derived SOA precursors, which included isoprene epoxydiols (IEPOX), methacrylic acid epoxide (MAE), and isoprene-derived hydroxyhydroperoxides (ISOPOOH), was conducted in order to isolate major isoprene-derived SOA formation pathways from each other and to determine which of these pathways (or SOA types) is potentially more toxic. Since IEPOX and MAE produce SOA through multiphase chemistry onto acidic sulfate aerosol, dark reactive uptake experiments of IEPOX and MAE in the presence of acidic sulfate aerosol were performed in a 10-m3 flexible Teflon indoor chamber at UNC-Chapel Hill. Since the generation of SOA from ISOPOOH (through a non-IEPOX route) requires a hydroxyl radical (•OH)-initiated oxidation, ozonolysis of tetramethylethylene (TME) was used to form the needed •OH radicals in the indoor chamber. The resultant low-volatility multifunctional hydroperoxides condensed onto nonacidified sulfate aerosol, yielding the ISOPOOH-derived SOA needed for exposures. Similar to the outdoor chamber SOAs, IEPOX, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOAs were collected onto Teflon membrane filters and were subsequently chemically characterized by GC/EI-MS and UPLC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS as well as for ROS-generation potential using the DTT assay. These filters were also used for resuspension in vitro exposures.

By conducting gene expression profiling, we provided mechanistic insights into the potential health effects of isoprene-derived SOA. First, gene expression profiling of 84 oxidative stress- and 249 inflammation-associated human genes was performed for cells exposed to isoprene-derived SOA generated in our outdoor chamber experiments in EAVES or by resuspension. Two pathway-focused panels were utilized for this purpose: (1) nCounter GX Human Inflammation Kit comprised of 249 human genes (NanoString), and (2) Human Oxidative Stress Plus RT2 Profiler PCR Array (Qiagen) comprised of 84 oxidative stress-associated genes. We compared the gene expression levels in cells exposed to SOA generated in an outdoor chamber from photochemical oxidation of isoprene in the presence of NO and acidified sulfate seed aerosol to cells exposed to a dark control mixture of isoprene, NO, and acidified sulfate seed aerosol to isolate the effects of the isoprene-derived SOA on the cells using the EAVES and resuspension exposure methods. Pathway-based analysis was performed for significantly altered genes using the ConsensusPathDB database, which is a database system for the integration of human gene functional interactions to provide biological pathway information for a gene set of interest. Pathway annotation was performed to provide biological pathway information for each gene set. The gene-gene interaction networks were constructed and visualized using the GeneMANIA Cytoscape app (version 3.4.1) to predict the putative function of altered genes. Lastly, isoprene-derived SOA collected onto filters was used in resuspension exposures to measure select inflammatory biomarkers, including interleukin 8 (IL-8) and prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2) genes, in BEAS-2B cells to ensure that effects observed from EAVES exposures were attributable to particle-phase organic products. Since EAVES and resuspension exposures compared well, gene expression profiling for IEPOX-, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOA were conducted using only resuspension exposures.

Results and conclusions: Chemical characterization coupled with biological analyses show that atmospherically relevant compositions of isoprene-derived SOA alter the levels of 41 oxidative stress-related genes. Of the different composition types of isoprene-derived SOA, MAE- and ISOPOOH-derived SOA altered the greatest number of genes, suggesting that carbonyl and hydroperoxide functional groups are oxidative stress promoters. Taken together, the different composition types accounted for 34 of the genes altered by the total isoprene-derived SOA mixture, while 7 remained unique to the total mixture exposures, indicating that there is either a synergistic effect of the different isoprene-derived SOA components or an unaccounted component in the mixture.

The high-oxides of nitrogen (NOx) regime, which yielded MAE- and methacrolein (MACR)-derived SOA, had a higher ROS-generation potential (as measured by the DTT assay) than the low- NOx regime, which included IEPOX- and isoprene-derived SOA. However, ISOPOOH-derived SOA, which also formed in the low- NOx regime, had the highest ROS-generation potential, similar to 1,4-naphthoquinone (1,4-NQ). This suggests that aerosol-phase organic peroxides contribute significantly to particulate matter (PM) oxidative potential. MAE- and MACR- derived SOA showed equal or greater ROS-generation potential than was reported in prior UNC-Chapel Hill studies on diesel exhaust PM, highlighting the importance of a comprehensive investigation of the toxicity of isoprene-derived SOA. Notably, ISOPOOH-derived SOA was one order of magnitude higher in ROS-generation potential than diesel exhaust particles previously examined at UNC-Chapel Hill. As an acellular assay, the DTT assay may not be predictive of oxidative stress; therefore, we also focused on the gene expression results from the cellular exposures.

We have demonstrated that the nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) and the redox-sensitive activation protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor networks have been significantly altered upon exposure to isoprene-derived SOA. The identification of Nrf2 pathway in cells exposed to isoprene-derived SOA is in accordance with our findings using the DTT assay, which measures the thiol reactivity of PM samples as a surrogate for their ROS-generation potential. Specifically, our results point to the cysteine-thiol modifications within cells that lead to activation of Nrf2-related gene expression.

However, based on our gene expression results showing no clear relationship between DTT activity and the number of altered oxidative stress-related genes, the DTT activity of isoprene-derived SOA may not be directly indicative of toxicity relative to other SOA types. While activation of Nrf2-associated genes has been identified with responses to oxidative stress and linked to traffic related air pollution exposure in both toxicological and epidemiological studies, their implicit involvement in this study suggests that activation of Nrf2-related gene expression may occur with exposures to all sorts of PM types.

By controlling the exposure time, method, and dose we demonstrated that among the SOA derived from previously identified individual precursors of isoprene-derived SOA, ISOPOOH-derived SOA alters more oxidative stress related genes than does IEPOX-derived SOA, but fewer than MAE-derived SOA. This suggests that the composition of MAE-derived SOA may be the greatest contributor to alterations of oxidative stress-related gene expression observed due to isoprene-derived SOA exposure. Further study on induced levels of protein expression and specific toxicological endpoints is necessary to determine if the observed gene expression changes lead to adverse health effects. In addition, such studies have implications for pollution-control strategies because NOx and SO2 are controllable pollutants that can alter the composition of SOA, and in turn alter its effects on gene expression. The mass fraction of different components of atmospheric isoprene derived SOA should be considered, but altering the fraction of high- NOx isoprene-derived SOA (e.g., MAE derived SOA) may yield greater changes in gene expression than altering the fraction of low- NOx isoprene derived SOA types (ISOPOOH- or IEPOX-derived SOA). Finally, this study confirms that total isoprene-derived SOA alters the expression of a greater number of genes than does SOA derived from the tested precursors. This warrants further work to determine the underlying explanation for this observation, which may be uncharacterized components of isoprene-derived SOA or the potential for synergism between the studied components.

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了解人为污染物增强的异戊二烯衍生颗粒物的早期生物学效应。
简介:大气细颗粒物(PM2.5;颗粒物(空气动力学直径≤2.5 μm)在空气质量、气候和公众健康中起着关键作用。在全球范围内,PM2.5的最大质量分数是有机的,主要是由大气氧化挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)形成的二次有机气溶胶(SOA)。来自植物的异戊二烯是排放到地球大气中最丰富的非甲烷挥发性有机化合物。异戊二烯最近被认为是全球SOA生产的主要来源之一,由于人为污染物的存在,如二氧化硫(SO2)衍生的酸性硫酸盐,通过其氧化产物的多相化学反应而增强。考虑到大气中异戊二烯衍生的SOA含量丰富,了解通过吸入暴露对健康产生不利影响的机制对于减轻其对公共健康的潜在影响至关重要。虽然以前的研究已经检查了某些异戊二烯衍生气相氧化产物的毒理学效应,但迄今为止,还没有系统的研究检查了异戊二烯衍生的SOA、其成分或其SOA前体对人体肺细胞的潜在毒理学效应。具体目的:本研究的总体目标是研究异戊二烯衍生的SOA及其亚型对BEAS-2B细胞(人类支气管上皮细胞系)的早期生物学效应,特别关注氧化应激和炎症相关基因的改变。为了实现这一目标,有两个具体目标。考虑到城市和顺风城市类型的化学反应,研究异戊二烯光化学氧化产生的SOA的毒性和早期生物效应。检查直接来自异戊二烯下游氧化产物(即环氧化物和氢过氧化物)的SOA的毒性和早期生物效应。方法:首先在自然光照下,在一氧化氮(NO)和酸化硫酸盐气溶胶的存在下,将异戊二烯光氧化生成异戊二烯衍生的SOA。实验在位于北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校(UNC-Chapel Hill)吉林斯全球公共卫生学院屋顶的120立方米室外特氟龙薄膜室中进行。使用静电气溶胶体外暴露系统(EAVES)将BEAS-2B细胞暴露于室生成的异戊二烯衍生的SOA中。这种方法使我们能够生成与大气相关的异戊二烯衍生SOA成分,并通过在体外暴露于气液界面来检查其毒性,从而提供更具生物学相关性的暴露模型。在EAVES取样的同时,将异戊二烯衍生的SOA样品收集到特氟隆膜过滤器上,进行体外重悬暴露,并通过气相色谱/电子电离-四极杆质谱(GC/EI-MS)(事先进行三甲基硅基化)和超高性能液相色谱耦合高分辨率四极杆飞行时间质谱(UPLC/ esi - hrqtofms)分析气溶胶化学成分。采用二硫代苏糖醇(DTT)法分析了异戊二烯衍生的SOA样品,以表征其活性氧(ROS)生成潜力。有机合成已知的异戊二烯衍生的SOA前体,包括异戊二烯环氧二醇(IEPOX)、甲基丙烯酸环氧化物(MAE)和异戊二烯衍生的羟基过氧化物(ISOPOOH),目的是分离出主要的异戊二烯衍生的SOA形成途径,并确定哪些途径(或SOA类型)可能毒性更大。由于ipox和MAE通过多相化学作用在酸性硫酸盐气溶胶上产生SOA,因此在北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校的10立方米柔性特氟龙室内室内进行了ipox和MAE在酸性硫酸盐气溶胶存在下的暗反应吸收实验。由于从isoooh生成SOA(通过非iepox途径)需要羟基自由基(•OH)引发氧化,因此在室内室中使用臭氧分解四亚甲基(TME)来形成所需的•OH自由基。由此产生的低挥发性多功能氢过氧化物凝聚在非酸化硫酸盐气溶胶上,产生暴露所需的isooh衍生SOA。与室外室的soa类似,ipox、MAE和isoopoh衍生的soa被收集到Teflon膜过滤器上,随后通过GC/EI-MS和UPLC/ESI-HR-QTOFMS进行化学表征,并使用DTT法测定ros生成潜力。这些过滤器也用于体外暴露的再悬浮。通过进行基因表达谱分析,我们对异戊二烯衍生SOA的潜在健康影响提供了机制见解。首先,我们对暴露于异戊二烯衍生SOA的细胞进行了84个氧化应激和249个炎症相关人类基因的基因表达谱分析,这些细胞是在EAVES的室外室内实验中或通过重悬浮产生的。 为此,我们使用了两个途径聚焦板:(1)nCounter GX Human Inflammation Kit,包含249个人类基因(NanoString); (2) Human Oxidative Stress Plus RT2 Profiler PCR Array (Qiagen),包含84个氧化应激相关基因。我们比较了暴露于室外室内由异戊二烯光化学氧化在NO和酸化硫酸盐种子气溶胶存在下产生的SOA的细胞中的基因表达水平,以及暴露于由异戊二烯、NO和酸化硫酸盐种子气溶胶组成的黑暗对照混合物的细胞中的基因表达水平,以分离异戊二烯衍生的SOA对细胞的影响,使用EAVES和重悬暴露方法。使用ConsensusPathDB数据库对显著改变的基因进行基于途径的分析,该数据库系统用于整合人类基因功能相互作用,为感兴趣的基因集提供生物学途径信息。对每个基因集进行通路注释,以提供生物学通路信息。使用GeneMANIA Cytoscape应用程序(版本3.4.1)构建和可视化基因-基因相互作用网络,以预测改变基因的假定功能。最后,将收集到过滤器上的异戊二烯衍生的SOA用于重悬暴露,以测量BEAS-2B细胞中选择的炎症生物标志物,包括白细胞介素8 (IL-8)和前列腺素内过氧化物合成酶2 (PTGS2)基因,以确保EAVES暴露所观察到的效应可归因于颗粒相有机产物。由于EAVES和重悬液暴露比较好,因此仅使用重悬液暴露对ipox, MAE和isoopoh衍生的SOA进行基因表达谱分析。结果和结论:化学表征和生物学分析表明,异戊二烯衍生SOA的大气相关成分改变了41个氧化应激相关基因的水平。在不同组成类型的异戊二烯衍生的SOA中,MAE-和isoopoh衍生的SOA改变了最多的基因,这表明羰基和氢过氧化物官能团是氧化应激促进剂。综上所述,被总异戊二烯衍生的SOA混合物改变的基因中有34个是不同的组成类型,而总混合物暴露的基因中有7个是独特的,这表明要么是不同的异戊二烯衍生的SOA成分的协同效应,要么是混合物中未考虑的成分。高氮氧化物(NOx)体系产生MAE-和甲基丙烯醛(MACR)衍生的SOA,比低氮氧化物体系(包括IEPOX-和异戊二烯衍生的SOA)具有更高的ros生成潜力(通过DTT测定)。然而,同样在低NOx环境下形成的isooh衍生的SOA具有最高的ros生成潜力,类似于1,4-萘醌(1,4- nq)。这表明气溶胶相有机过氧化物对颗粒物(PM)氧化电位有重要贡献。与之前北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校对柴油废气PM的研究相比,MAE和MACR衍生的SOA显示出相同或更高的ros生成潜力,突出了对异戊二烯衍生的SOA毒性进行全面调查的重要性。值得注意的是,与北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校之前研究的柴油尾气颗粒相比,isopoh衍生的SOA产生ros的潜力高出一个数量级。作为一种脱细胞检测,DTT检测可能不能预测氧化应激;因此,我们也关注细胞暴露的基因表达结果。我们已经证明,核因子(红细胞衍生的2)样2 (Nrf2)和氧化还原敏感激活蛋白-1 (AP-1)转录因子网络在暴露于异戊二烯衍生的SOA后显著改变。暴露于异戊二烯衍生SOA的细胞中Nrf2途径的鉴定与我们使用DTT测定的结果一致,DTT测定PM样品的硫醇反应性,作为其ros生成潜力的替代。具体来说,我们的研究结果指出,细胞内的半胱氨酸巯基修饰导致nrf2相关基因表达的激活。然而,基于我们的基因表达结果显示DTT活性与氧化应激相关基因改变数量之间没有明确的关系,异戊二烯衍生SOA的DTT活性可能不会直接指示相对于其他SOA类型的毒性。虽然在毒理学和流行病学研究中已经确定nrf2相关基因的激活与氧化应激反应有关,并与交通相关的空气污染暴露有关,但它们在本研究中的隐含参与表明,nrf2相关基因表达的激活可能与暴露于各种PM类型有关。 通过控制暴露时间、方法和剂量,我们证明了在从先前确定的异戊二烯衍生SOA的单个前体衍生的SOA中,isoopoh衍生SOA比iepox衍生SOA改变更多的氧化应激相关基因,但比mae衍生SOA少。这表明,mae衍生SOA的组成可能是由于异戊二烯衍生SOA暴露而观察到的氧化应激相关基因表达改变的最大贡献者。为了确定观察到的基因表达变化是否会导致不利的健康影响,有必要进一步研究诱导的蛋白质表达水平和特定的毒理学终点。此外,这些研究对污染控制策略也有影响,因为氮氧化物和二氧化硫是可控制的污染物,可以改变SOA的组成,进而改变其对基因表达的影响。应考虑大气异戊二烯衍生SOA的不同组分的质量分数,但改变高NOx异戊二烯衍生SOA的比例(例如,MAE衍生SOA)可能比改变低NOx异戊二烯衍生SOA类型(ISOPOOH或iepox衍生SOA)的比例产生更大的基因表达变化。最后,本研究证实,总异戊二烯衍生的SOA比从测试前体衍生的SOA改变了更多基因的表达。这需要进一步的工作来确定这一观察结果的潜在解释,这可能是异戊二烯衍生SOA的未表征组件,也可能是所研究组件之间的协同作用。
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