使用质谱法调查暴露于喷气式飞机油烟的生物标志物。

Clement E Furlong, Rebecca Richter, Judit Marsillach, Alex Zelter, Matthew McDonald, Allan Rettie, Oksana Lockridge, Rachel Lundeen, Dale Whittington
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引用次数: 0

摘要

大多数商用喷气式客机使用压缩发动机空气作为机舱通风和增压的来源。这种“引气”设计意味着,在正常飞行期间,发动机油和/或液压油可能会污染通风供气,使机上机组人员和乘客暴露在烟雾中。油和液压油含有磷酸三芳酯(TAPs)和分解产物的复杂混合物。虽然吸入这些烟雾对健康和飞行安全造成的后果已被广泛记录在案,但缺乏机上吸入暴露的措施。本文提出了一种方法,通过使用高分辨率质谱(MS)来监测和量化受试者的丁基胆碱酯酶(BChE)的翻译后修饰,这些修饰与暴露于发动机机油TAPs一致。我们假设暴露个体的血浆会在BChE的活性位点丝氨酸(Ser198)上显示修饰或加合物。从82名暴露者的血浆BChE纯化到接近均匀,并使用固定在顺磁珠上的抗体进行浓缩。纯化后的BChE在低pH下洗脱,用胰蛋白酶消化,用液相色谱-质谱法分析。在报告船上油烟暴露的受试者中,最一致的修饰含ser198的色氨酸的加合物的质量值为+154.0031 Da。通过比较+154Da修饰的含Ser198肽段的相对MS1强度与含有活性位点的可观察肽段的相对MS1强度(包括缺失的切割),确定了+154Da修饰的归一化峰面积(NPA)。值得注意的是,本研究中纯化的BChE体外暴露的生物活性TAPs中的加合物(即+80Da, +156Da, +170Da和+186Da)以及其他早期体外研究中报道的加合物(即+65Da, +80Da, +91Da, +107Da, +165Da, +180Da, +181Da和+277Da)未在暴露的受试者中检测到。在本研究的82名受试者中,+154Da-Ser198的平均NPA来自于2012年之前的烟雾事件暴露(N=54;0.46-17.8, X - = 3.93)是对照组的7.8倍。由于报告暴露与抽血之间的时间滞后,这些数据未得到纠正。其余28名2016-2024年接触的受试者样本在背景水平下仅显示154Da的改变(0.24-1.13;X - = 0.50),这在至少三个月未乘飞机的人的对照血浆样本中得到证实。随着时间的推移,在暴露个体中观察到的154Da加合物的减少可能是在研究过程中添加到发动机油中的OP混合物配方变化的结果。进一步调查其他蛋白质生物标记物和加合物与暴露于当前飞机上的油添加剂和液压油烟雾有关。最令人满意的解决方案是通过实施无排气系统来消除暴露危害,或者至少开发毒性较小的油配方,合适的排气空气过滤器和改进设计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Investigating biomarkers of exposure to jet aircraft oil fumes using mass spectrometry.

Most commercial passenger jet aircraft use compressed engine air after cooling as a source for ventilation and cabin pressurization onboard. This "bleed air" design means that engine oil and/or hydraulic fluid can contaminate the ventilation supply air during otherwise normal flights, exposing onboard crewmembers and passengers to the fumes. The oils and hydraulic fluids contain a complex mixture of triaryl phosphates (TAPs) and decomposition products. Although the health and flight safety consequences of inhaling these fumes have been widely documented, measures of onboard inhalation exposure have been lacking. An approach is presented for documenting exposure to engine oil fumes by using high-resolution mass spectrometry (MS) to monitor and quantify post-translational modifications of subjects' butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) that are consistent with exposure to the engine oil TAPs. We hypothesized that plasma from exposed individuals would show modifications or adducts on the active site serine (Ser198) of BChE. Plasma BChE from 81 exposed subjects was purified to near homogeneity and concentrated using antibodies immobilized on paramagnetic beads. The purified BChE was eluted at low pH, neutralized, digested with trypsin, and analyzed by liquid chromatography (LC)-MS. In subjects reporting onboard oil fume exposures, the most consistent adduct modifying the Ser198-containing tryptic peptide had a mass value of +154.0031 Da. The normalized peak area (NPA) of the +154Da modification was determined by comparing the relative MS1 intensities of the +154Da-modified Ser198 containing peptide to the total observable peptides containing the active site, including missed cleavages. Notably, adducts from in vitro exposures of bioactivated TAPs to purified BChE conducted in this study (i.e., +80Da, +156Da, +170Da, and +186Da) as well as adducts reported in other earlier in vitro studies (i.e., +65Da, +80Da, +91Da, +107Da, +165Da, +180Da, +181Da, and +277Da) were not detected in exposed subjects. Of the 81 subjects in this study, the average NPA of +154Da-Ser198 resulted from fume event exposures that pre-dated 2013 (N=59); range = 0.46%-17.8%, with X̅ =4.84% which was 9.7 times higher than control subjects ( = 0.50%) These data are uncorrected for the time lag between the reported exposure and the blood draw. Samples from the remaining 16 subjects with exposures from 2016-2024 showed only the 154Da modification at background levels (0.24%-1.13%; =0.55%), as confirmed in control plasma samples from individuals who had not flown in at least three months. The observed reduction in the 154Da adduct over time in exposed individuals is likely a function of the change in the formulation of the OP blends added to engine oils during the course of the study. Further investigation into other protein biomarkers and adducts correlated with exposure to the current oil additives and hydraulic fluid fumes on aircraft is warranted. The most satisfactory solution would be to eliminate the exposure hazard by implementing bleed-free systems or, at a minimum, to develop less toxic oil formulations, suitable bleed air filters, and modified designs.

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