| Literature DB >> 21461032 |
Abstract
Air pollution has been associated with significant adverse health effects leading to increased overall morbidity and mortality of worldwide significance. Epidemiological studies have shown that the largest portion of air pollution-related mortality is due to cardiovascular diseases, predominantly those of ischemic nature. Human studies suggest an association with atherosclerosis and increasing experimental animal data support that this association is likely to be causal. While both gasses and particles have been linked to detrimental health effects, more evidence implicates the particulate matter (PM) components as major responsible for a large portion of the proatherogenic effects. Multiple experimental approaches have revealed the ability of PM components to trigger and/or enhance free radical reactions in cells and tissues, both ex vivo as well as in vivo. It appears that exposure to PM leads to the development of systemic prooxidant and proinflammatory effects that may be of great importance in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. This article reviews the epidemiological studies, experimental animal, and cellular data that support the association of air pollutants, especially the particulate components, with systemic oxidative stress, inflammation, and atherosclerosis. It also reviews the use of transcriptomic studies to elucidate molecular pathways of importance in those systemic effects.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21461032 PMCID: PMC3040314 DOI: 10.1007/s11869-010-0101-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Air Qual Atmos Health ISSN: 1873-9318 Impact factor: 3.763
Fig. 1Potential mechanisms how exposure to PM leads to CV disease. Three main pathways could mediate PM-related cardiovascular effects: (1) induction of autonomic nervous system imbalance, (2) development of pulmonary oxidative stress and inflammation with systemic “spill-over” of inflammatory mediators (e.g., cytokines, activated cells), (3) translocation of particles and/or chemical constituents to the systemic circulation. CHF congestive heart failure, CV cardiovascular, CVA cerebrovascular accident, EC endothelial cells, IHD ischemic heart disease, PVD peripheral vascular disease. Pulmonary inflammation may range from activation of inflammatory molecular pathways without histological evidence of it to overt infiltration by inflammatory cells. Taken from Araujo and Book (2011)
Human studies linking exposure to air pollution with atherosclerosis
| Study | Air pollutant | Evaluation of atherosclerosis | Major findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kunzli et al. | PM2.5-Ozone | CIMT | 5.9% increased in CIMT per every 10 μg PM2.5/m3 | (Kunzli et al. |
| Hoffmann et al. | PM2.5-Distance to major road | CACS | Increased CAC scores with shorter distances to a major road | (Hoffmann et al. |
| Diez Roux et al. | PM10 -PM2.5 | CIMT CACS BAI | 1–3% increase in CIMT per every increase in 21 and 12.5 μg/m3 of PM10 and PM2.5 respectively | (Diez Roux et al. |
| Allen et al. | PM2.5-distance to major road | Aortic calcification | 6% increase in the risk of aortic calcification with a 10 μg/m3 increase in PM2.5 | (Allen et al. |
| Hoffman et al. | PM2.5-distance to major road | BAI | Decreased BAI in subjects living within 50 meters from a major road, especially women | (Hoffman et al. |
| Kunzli et al. | PM2.5-distance to highway or major road | CIMT | Greater annual progression of CIMT among individuals living <100 m from a highway | (Kunzli et al. |
Studies are listed in chronological order based on the year of publication. CIMT carotid intima-media thickness, CACS coronary artery calcium score, BAI brachial artery index. Modified from Araujo (2011)
Animal studies evaluating the effect of particulate air pollution on atherosclerosis
| Study | PM fraction (mode of administration) | Animal model | Diet | Assessment of atherosclerosis (method) | Effect of PM on atherosclerosis | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suwa et al. | PM10 (IT) | Watanabe rabbits | Chow | Percent lesional volume in coronary arteries and aorta (histology) | Increase | (Suwa et al. |
| Chen and Nadziejko | PM2.5 (inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/−, LDL−/− mice and apoE−/− mice | Chow | Percent lesional area in whole aorta (histology) | No change (apoE−/−, LDL−/− mice) increase (apoE−/− mice) | (Chen and Nadziejko |
| Sun et al. | PM2.5 (inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/− mice | Chow or CED | Percent lesional area in cross-sections of aorta (histology) | N.S. increase (chow-fed mice). Increase (CED-fed mice) | (Sun et al. |
| Niwa et al. | Carbon black (IT) | LDL-R−/− mice | CED | Percent lesional area in whole aorta (histology) | Increase | (Niwa et al. |
| Sun et al. | PM2.5 (Inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/− mice | Chow or CED | Percent lesional area in aorta (ultrasound) | N.S. increase (chow-fed mice). Increase (CED-fed mice) | (Sun et al. |
| Yatera et al. | PM10 (IT) | Watanabe rabbits | Chow | Percent lesional volume and% lesional area in the aorta (histology) | Increase | (Yatera et al. |
| Araujo et al. | PM2.5 and UFP (Inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/− mice | Chow | Mean lesional area in aortic root (histology) | N.S. increase (PM2.5-exposed mice) Increase (UFP-exposed mice) | (Araujo et al. |
| Castro-Soares et al. | PM (inhaled polluted air) | LDLR−/− mice | CED | Percent lesional area in aortic root. Aortic wall thickness (histology) | No change in lesional area.Increase in wall thickness | (Soares et al. |
| Ying et al. | PM2.5 (inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/− mice | CED | Percent lesional area in cross-sections of aorta (histology) | Increase | (Ying et al. |
| Campen et al. | PM + gasses (Inhaled DE) | apoE−/− mice | CED | Percent lesional area in the aortic root plaque composition | N.S. increase. Increase in macrophage content | (Campen et al. |
| Chen et al. | PM2.5 (inhaled CAPs) | apoE−/− mice | Chow | Percent lesional area in brachiocephalic and left common arteries (ultrasound) | Increase | (Chen et al. |
| Quan et al. | PM±/− gasses (Inhaled CAPs vs. Inhaled whole DE or DE gasses) | apoE−/− mice | Chow | Percent lesional area in brachiocephalic artery (ultrasound) | Increase (CAPs ≥ whole DE ≥ DE gasses = filtered air) | (Quan et al. |
Studies are shown in chronological order based on the year of publication. IT intratraqueal, CAPs concentrated ambient particles, DE diesel emissions, CED cholesterol-enriched diet, NS not significant. Modified from Araujo (2011)
Mechanisms mediating PM-induced proatherogenic effects. In vitro and experimental animal evidence
| Mechanisms | Indicators | References |
|---|---|---|
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| Oxidative stress in systemic tissues | Increased liver peroxidation and upregulation of antioxidant genes in liver | (Gong et al. |
| Alteration of circulating lipoproteins | Oxidative modification of LDL | (Soares et al. |
| Generation of dysfunctional HDL | (Araujo et al. | |
| Vascular prooxidant effects | Increased ROS production in ECs and macrophages | (Goldsmith et al. |
| Upregulation of antioxidant genes in ECs and macrophages | (Hirano et al. | |
| Activation of NADPH oxidase in ECs and macrophages | (Beck-Speier et al. | |
| Induction of electron leaks in mitochondrial electron transport complexes in ECs | (Li et al. | |
| Increased ROS in vessels with atherosclerotic plaques | (Sun et al. | |
| Vascular proinflammatory effects | Greater proinflammatory cytokine production in ECs and macrophages | (Alfaro-Moreno et al. |
| Increased expression of cell adhesion molecules in ECs | (Li et al. | |
| Greater monocyte adhesion to ECs | (Li et al. | |
| Monocyte migration and recruitment in atherosclerotic vessels | (Yatera et al. | |
| Activation of NF-kB in ECs and macrophages | (Mondal et al. | |
| Activation of MAPK in ECs and macropages | (Hiura et al. | |
| Activation of ERK1/2 pathways in ECs and macrophages | (Beck-Speier et al. | |
| Increased proinflammatory cytokines in circulating blood | (Mutlu et al. | |
| Vascular toxic effects | Decrease in viability of ECs and macrophages | (Hiura et al. |
| Increased in ECs and macrophages | (Hiura et al. | |
| Increase in EC permeability and/or upregulation of genes involved in EC permeability | (Nadadur et al. | |
| Antiproliferative effects in ECs | (Yamawaki and Iwai | |
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| Systemic inflammation | Elevated circulating pro-inflammatory biomarkers/mediators (figrinogen, CRP, TNF-α, IL 1-ß, IL-6, IL-7, GM-CSF, ICAM-1) | (Ibald-Mulli et al. |
| Systemic oxidative stress | Increased biomarkers of lipid, protein or DNA oxidation | (Sorensen et al. |
| Elevated plasma homocysteine | (Baccarelli et al. | |
| Inhibition of oxidative response by w-3 PUFA | (Romieu et al. | |
| Systemic hypertension | Elevated systemic diastolic and/or systolic blood pressure | (Ibald-Mulli et al. |
| Elevated endothelin-1 levels | (Peters et al. | |
CRP C-reactive protein, ECs endothelial cells, ET-1 endothelin 1, GM-CSF granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor, ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecular 1; IL interleulin, PUFA polyunsaturated fatty acids, ROS reactive oxygen species, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor α
Transcriptomic studies evaluating the effect of PM on vascular cells
| Study | PM source | Cells or tissue/platform | Design | Findings | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verheyen et al. | DEP | THP-1 differentiated macropahges/incyte cDNA clone set | PMA-differentiated cells were treated with DEP for 6 and 24 h vs. controls | 50 and 39 clones were up or downregulated at 6 h; 54 and 60 clones were up or downregulated at 24 h (>1.3-fold). Genes were enriched in immune response, cell adhesion, apoptosis, metabolism, signal transduction and transport pathways | (Verheyen et al. |
| Yamawaki and Iwai | Carbon black (CB) | HUVECs/Affimetrix | Cells treated with CB for 24 h vs. controls | Top 89 upregulated probesets included IL-8, CXCL2, CXCL3, VCAM1, HO-1, MMP10, BMP2. | (Yamawaki and Iwai |
| Gong et al. | DEP | HMECs/Illumina | Cells treated with DEP, oxPAPC and DEP + oxPAPC for 4 h vs. controls | 1,555 regulated genes > 1.5-folds. 664 genes of those exhibited synergistic effects between DEP and oxPAPC. Genes were enriched in antioxidant, inflammatory, unfolded protein response and apoptosis pathways | (Gong et al. |
| Nadadur et al. | ROFA and Vanadium | HUVECs/Clontech cDNA array | Cells treated with ROFA or Vanadium for 30 min vs. controls | 810 genes regulated by ROFA >2-folds (339 upregulated and 471 downregulated). Genes wereenriched in cytokines/groth factors, cell adhesion molecules, transporters, signal transduction families. Nine transcription factors were activated by ROFA (>2-fold by TranSignal Protein/DNA arrays) which included AP-1, Nrf2, and USF-1 | (Nadadur et al. |
| Huang et al. | PM2.5 | Alveolar macrophages/Agilent | Cells treated with PM2.5 for 4 h vs. control | 38 and 43 differentially up or downregulated genes, respectively. Upregulated genes were enriched in metal binding, antioxidant functions including Metallothioneins, NQO1, MMP9, ATOX1 | (Huang et al. |
| Floyd et al. | PM2.5 | Aortic atherosclerotic plaques/Affymetrix | Plaques harvested by LCM from apoE−/− exposed to PM2.5 vs. filtered air for 5 months | 611 differentially expressed genes (216 upregulated, 395 downregulated) enriched in inflammation, immunological disease, lipid metabolism, cell death ontological categories among others | (Floyd et al. |
DEP diesel exhaust particles, HMECs human microvascular endothelial cells, HUVECs human umbilical vein endothelial cells, LCM laser capture microdissection, ox-PAPC oxidized PAPC, oxidized PAPC (1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphorylcholine), PMA phorbol myristate acetate, ROFA residual oil fly ash, AP-1 activating protein 1, ATOX1 Atx1 antioxidant protein 1 homolog, BMP2 Bone morphogenetic protein 2, CXCL2 chemokin (C-X-C motif) ligand 2, CXCL3 chemokin (C-X-C motif) ligand 3, HO-1 heme oxygenase 1, IL-8 interleukin 8, MMP10 matrix metalloproteinase 10, NQO1 NAD(P)H dehydrogenase, quinone 1, Nrf2 NFE-E2 related factor 2, USF1 upstream stimulating factor 1, VCAM1 vascular cell adhesion molecule 1