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Intratracheal instillation of respirable particulate matter elicits neuroendocrine activation

Metadata Updated: February 5, 2024

Objective: Inhalation of ozone activates central sympathetic-adrenal-medullary and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal stress axes. While airway neural networks are known to communicate noxious stimuli to higher brain centers, it is not known to what extent responses generated from pulmonary airways contribute to neuroendocrine activation.

Materials and methods: Unlike inhalational exposures that involve the entire respiratory tract, we employed intratracheal (IT) instillations to expose only pulmonary airways to either soluble metal-rich residual oil fly ash (ROFA) or compressor-generated diesel exhaust particles (C-DEP). Male Wistar-Kyoto rats (12-13 weeks) were IT instilled with either saline, C-DEP or ROFA (5 mg/kg) and necropsied at 4 or 24 hr to assess temporal effects.

Results: IT-instillation of particulate matter (PM) induced hyperglycemia as early as 30-min and glucose intolerance when measured at 2 hr post-exposure. We observed PM- and time-specific effects on markers of pulmonary injury/inflammation (ROFA>C-DEP; 24 hr>4hr) as corroborated by increases in lavage fluid injury markers, neutrophils (ROFA>C-DEP), and lymphocytes (ROFA). Increases in lavage fluid pro-inflammatory cytokines differed between C-DEP and ROFA in that C-DEP caused larger increases in TNF-α whereas ROFA caused larger increases in IL-6. No increases in circulating cytokines occurred. At 4 hr, PM impacts on neuroendocrine activation were observed through depletion of circulating leukocytes, increases in adrenaline (ROFA), and decreases in thyroid-stimulating-hormone, T3, prolactin, luteinizing-hormone, and testosterone. C-DEP and ROFA both increased lung expression of genes involved in acute stress and inflammatory processes. Moreover, small increases occurred in hypothalamic Fkbp5, a glucocorticoid-sensitive gene.

Conclusion: Respiratory alterations differed between C-DEP and ROFA, with ROFA inducing greater overall lung injury/inflammation; however, both PM induced a similar degree of neuroendocrine activation. These findings demonstrate neuroendocrine activation after pulmonary-only PM exposure, and suggest the involvement of pituitary- and adrenal-derived hormones.

This dataset is associated with the following publication: Alewel, D., A. Henriquez, M. Schladweiler, R. Grindstaff, A. Astriab Fisher, S. Snow , T. Jackson, and U. Kodavanti. Intratracheal instillation of respirable particulate matter elicits neuroendocrine activation. INHALATION TOXICOLOGY. Taylor & Francis, Inc., Philadelphia, PA, USA, 35(3-4): 59-75, (2023).

Access & Use Information

Public: This dataset is intended for public access and use. License: See this page for license information.

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References

https://doi.org/10.1080/08958378.2022.2100019
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590194

Dates

Metadata Created Date February 5, 2024
Metadata Updated Date February 5, 2024

Metadata Source

Harvested from EPA ScienceHub

Additional Metadata

Resource Type Dataset
Metadata Created Date February 5, 2024
Metadata Updated Date February 5, 2024
Publisher U.S. EPA Office of Research and Development (ORD)
Maintainer
Identifier https://doi.org/10.23719/1530092
Data Last Modified 2023-01-31
Public Access Level public
Bureau Code 020:00
Schema Version https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
Harvest Object Id 6a44b7fc-9de7-411b-b44e-3da24cba0bed
Harvest Source Id 04b59eaf-ae53-4066-93db-80f2ed0df446
Harvest Source Title EPA ScienceHub
License https://pasteur.epa.gov/license/sciencehub-license.html
Program Code 020:000
Publisher Hierarchy U.S. Government > U.S. Environmental Protection Agency > U.S. EPA Office of Research and Development (ORD)
Related Documents https://doi.org/10.1080/08958378.2022.2100019, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590194
Source Datajson Identifier True
Source Hash cc732bb5b502d5d9317e8a9eefc4aac185a408d173ebe82898eaca4b21acc850
Source Schema Version 1.1

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