Literature DB >> 15739802

Potential toxicity of nonregulated asbestiform minerals: balangeroite from the western Alps. Part 2: Oxidant activity of the fibers.

Francesco Turci1, Maura Tomatis, Elena Gazzano, Chiara Riganti, Gianmario Martra, Amalia Bosia, Dario Ghigo, Bice Fubini.   

Abstract

The asbestiform mineral balangeroite [(Mg,Fe2+,Fe3+,Mn2+)42Si16O54(OH)36], whose toxic potential is unknown, is associated with chrysotile asbestos in the western Alps (Balangero mine, Piedmont, Italy). In order to examine whether such fibers may contribute to the oxidative damage produced by local asbestos dusts when inhaled, balangeroite was studied by means of both cell-free and cellular tests, comparing the results with those concerning the most pathogenic asbestos form, crocidolite. Similarly to the crocidolite surface, iron was mobilized from balangeroite by chelators, to a different extent: deferoxamine > ascorbic acid > ferrozine. Poorly coordinated surface ions, as evaluated from the adsorption of NO as a probe molecule (by both calorimetry and infrared spectroscopy), are even more abundant on balangeroite than on crocidolite. The spin trapping technique shows that surface iron-derived Fenton activity (HO* from H2O2) is similar for the two fiber types, while a pretreatment in ascorbic acid, by reducing previously oxidized surface iron, activates the potential to cleave a C-H bond (yielding *CO2- from formate anion). Balangeroite, like crocidolite, produces nitrite accumulation, lipid peroxidation, and NO synthase activation in a human lung epithelial cell line (A549). All these findings, regarded as features related to the toxic potential of asbestos, suggest that balangeroite may be a potentially hazardous fiber per se and could be partly responsible for lung diseases reported in epidemiological studies in exposed miners.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15739802     DOI: 10.1080/15287390590523911

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Toxicol Environ Health A        ISSN: 0098-4108


  3 in total

Review 1.  Health risk of chrysotile revisited.

Authors:  David Bernstein; Jacques Dunnigan; Thomas Hesterberg; Robert Brown; Juan Antonio Legaspi Velasco; Raúl Barrera; John Hoskins; Allen Gibbs
Journal:  Crit Rev Toxicol       Date:  2013-02       Impact factor: 5.635

Review 2.  Live-cell imaging approaches for the investigation of xenobiotic-induced oxidant stress.

Authors:  Phillip A Wages; Wan-Yun Cheng; Eugene Gibbs-Flournoy; James M Samet
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2016-05-18

Review 3.  Occupational exposure to asbestos and cardiovascular related diseases: A meta-analysis.

Authors:  Yi Rong; Xin Luo; Zhihong Zhang; Xiuqing Cui; Yuewei Liu; Weihong Chen
Journal:  Prev Med Rep       Date:  2015-10-21
  3 in total

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