首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Benzene is an important industrial chemical. At certain levels, benzene has been found to produce aplastic anemia, pancytopenia, myeloblastic anemia and genotoxic effects in humans. Metabolism by cytochrome P450 monooxygenases and myeloperoxidase to hydroquinone, phenol, and other metabolites contributes to benzene toxicity. Other xenobiotic substrates for cytochrome P450 can alter benzene metabolism. At high concentrations, toluene has been shown to inhibit benzene metabolism and benzene-induced toxicities. The present study investigated the genotoxicity of exposure to benzene and toluene at lower and intermittent co-exposures. Mice were exposed via whole-body inhalation for 6h/day for 8 days (over a 15-day time period) to air, 50 ppm benzene, 100 ppm toluene, 50 ppm benzene and 50 ppm toluene, or 50 ppm benzene and 100 ppm toluene. Mice exposed to 50 ppm benzene exhibited an increased frequency (2.4-fold) of micronucleated polychromatic erythrocytes (PCE) and increased levels of urinary metabolites (t,t-muconic acid, hydroquinone, and s-phenylmercapturic acid) vs. air-exposed controls. Benzene co-exposure with 100 ppm toluene resulted in similar urinary metabolite levels but a 3.7-fold increase in frequency of micronucleated PCE. Benzene co-exposure with 50 ppm toluene resulted in a similar elevation of micronuclei frequency as with 100 ppm toluene which did not differ significantly from 50 ppm benzene exposure alone. Both co-exposures - 50 ppm benzene with 50 or 100 ppm toluene - resulted in significantly elevated CYP2E1 activities that did not occur following benzene or toluene exposure alone. Whole blood glutathione (GSH) levels were similarly decreased following exposure to 50 ppm benzene and/or 100 ppm toluene, while co-exposure to 50 ppm benzene and 100 ppm toluene significantly decreased GSSG levels and increased the GSH/GSSG ratio. The higher frequency of micronucleated PCE following benzene and toluene co-exposure when compared with mice exposed to benzene or toluene alone suggests that, at the doses used in this study, toluene can enhance benzene-induced clastogenic or aneugenic bone marrow injury. These findings exemplify the importance of studying the effects of binary chemical interactions in animals exposed to lower exposure concentrations of benzene and toluene on benzene metabolism and clastogenicity. The relevance of these data on interactions for humans exposed at low benzene concentrations can be best assessed only when the mechanism of interaction is understood at a quantitative level and incorporated within a biologically based modeling framework.  相似文献   

2.
A gas chromatography-mass spectrometry method for measurement of the main urinary metabolites of benzene, namely, phenol, catechol, hydroquinone, 1,2,4-trihydroxybenzene (trihydroxybenzene), t,t-muconic acid (muconic acid), and S-phenylmercapturic acid (phenylmercapturic acid), is reported. The method is considerably simpler than existing assays. It was applied to urine from benzene-exposed subjects and controls from Shanghai, China. When subjects were divided into controls (n = 44), those exposed to 31 ppm benzene (n = 19), Spearman correlations with exposure category were >/= 0.728 (p < 0.0001) for all metabolites except trihydroxybenzene. When exposed subjects were compared on an individual basis, all metabolites, including trihydroxybenzene, were significantly correlated with benzene exposure (Pearson r >/= 0.472, p /= 0.708, p < 0.0001). Ratios of individual metabolite levels to total metabolite levels provided evidence of competitive inhibition of CYP 2E1 enzymes leading to increased production of phenol, catechol, and phenylmercapturic acid at the expense of hydroquinone, trihydroxybenzene, and muconic acid. Since all metabolites were detected in all control subjects, the method can be applied to persons exposed to environmental levels of benzene.  相似文献   

3.
Exposure to benzene can cause DNA damage and the subsequent development of cancer. In this study, study subjects were 31 laboratory workers at a petrochemical factory and 31 gasoline service attendants. Control subjects were 34 workers from a mail sorting service center. Occupational exposures to benzene were assessed using biomarkers of exposure in blood and urine. Induction of DNA-repair capacity was assessed as a biomarker of early effect. The effects of polymorphisms in a metabolizing gene (CYP2E1), in detoxification genes (NQO1 and GSTT1), and in a DNA-repair gene (XRCC1, codon 399) on biomarker levels were evaluated. The mean individual benzene exposure of laboratory workers (24.40+/-5.82 ppb) and that of gasoline service attendants (112.41+/-13.92 ppb) were significantly higher than in controls (1.39+/-0.17 ppb, p<0.001). Blood benzene levels of laboratory workers (169.12+/-30.60 ppt) and gasoline service attendants (483.46+/-59.62 ppt) were significantly higher than those of the controls (43.30+/-4.89 ppt, p<0.001). Trans,trans-muconic acid levels in post-shift urine samples collected from laboratory workers (0.14+/-0.02 mg/g creatinine) and gasoline service attendants (0.20+/-0.02 mg/g creatinine) were significantly higher than in urine samples of controls (0.04+/-0.01 mg/g creatinine, p<0.001). The level of benzene exposure was correlated with blood benzene levels (R2=0.65, p<0.01) and post-shift urinary trans,trans-muconic acid concentrations (R2=0.49, p<0.01). As a biomarker of early effect, DNA-repair capacity was assessed by use of the cytogenetic challenge assay, i.e., chromosomal aberrations in peripheral lymphocytes were assessed after challenging blood cultures with 1 Gy gamma radiation. A significantly lower DNA-repair capacity--determined as dicentrics in laboratory workers (0.17 per metaphase cell) and in gasoline service attendants (0.19 per metaphase cell) compared with controls (0.12 per metaphase cell, p<0.001)--was observed. The frequency of deletions in laboratory workers (0.22 per metaphase cell) and gasoline service attendants (0.39 per metaphase cell) were significantly higher than in control workers (0.16 per metaphase cell, p<0.01 and p<0.001, respectively). An increase in radiation-induced dicentrics and deletions indicate a lower DNA-repair capacity in benzene-exposed workers. The influence of genetic polymorphisms on the biomarkers was assessed. Benzene-exposed workers who carried CYP2E1*1/*5 or *5/*5 genotypes excreted slightly higher levels of trans,trans-muconic acid than workers who carried the CYP2E1*1/*1 genotype. In this study, NQO1 and GSTT1 genotypes did not have any effect on the levels of trans,trans-muconic acid. In the case of XRCC1, laboratory workers with 399Arg/Gln or Gln/Gln had a lower DNA-repair capacity--measured as radiation-induced frequency of dicentrics and deletions--than those with the 399Arg/Arg genotype (p<0.01). Our results show that biomarkers of internal dose and early biological effect in people occupationally exposed to benzene are influenced by genetic polymorphisms in susceptibility genes.  相似文献   

4.
This report is part of an extensive study to verify the validity, specificity, and sensitivity of biomarkers of benzene at low exposures and assess their relationships with personal exposure and genetic damage. The study population was selected from benzene-exposed workers in Tianjin, China, based on historical exposure data. The recruitment of 130 exposed workers from glue-making or shoe-making plants and 51 unexposed subjects from nearby food factories was based on personal exposure measurements conducted for 3-4 weeks prior to collection of biological samples. In this report we investigated correlation of urinary benzene metabolites, S-phenylmercapturic acid (S-PMA) and trans,trans-muconic acid (t,t-MA) with personal exposure levels on the day of urine collection and studied the effect of dose on the biotransformation of benzene to these key metabolites. Urinary S-PMA and t,t-MA were determined simultaneously by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analyses. Both S-PMA and t,t-MA, but specifically the former, correlated well with personal benzene exposure over a broad range of exposure (0.06-122 ppm). There was good correlation in the subgroup that had been exposed to <1 ppm benzene with both metabolites (P-trend <0.0001 for S-PMA and 0.006 for t,t-MA). Furthermore, the levels of S-PMA were significantly higher in the subgroup exposed to <0.25 ppm than that in unexposed subjects (n=17; P=0.001). There is inter-individual variation in the rate of conversion of benzene into urinary metabolites. The percentage of biotransformation of benzene to urinary S-PMA ranged from 0.005 to 0.3% and that to urinary t,t-MA ranged from 0.6 to approximately 20%. The percentage of benzene biotransformed into S-PMA and t,t-MA decreased with increasing concentration of benzene, especially conversion of benzene into t,t-MA. It appears that women excreted more metabolites than men for the same levels of benzene exposures. Our data suggest that S-PMA is superior to t,t-MA as a biomarker for low levels of benzene exposure.  相似文献   

5.
Joo WA  Kang MJ  Son WK  Lee HJ  Lee DY  Lee E  Kim CW 《Proteomics》2003,3(12):2402-2411
Low levels and long term exposure to benzene is associated with hematotoxicity including aplastic anemia, acute myelogenous leukemia, and lymphoma. Current biomonitoring methods such as urinary phenol, S-phenylmercapturic acid, and trans-trans muconic acid were found to be unreliable as analytical methods to detect benzene exposure. Therefore, to search for a specific protein for biomonitoring benzene exposure, we investigated plasma proteins from workers (n = 50) at a printing company who were exposed to benzene, by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The protein profiles are significantly different (p < 0.05) between benzene exposed and unexposed groups, as identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight mass spectrometry and confirmed by Western blot analyses. T cell receptor beta chain (TCR beta), FK506-binding protein, and matrix metalloproteinase-13 were expressed only in benzene exposed workers. In addition, interleukin-4 receptor alpha chain and T cell surface glycoprotein CD1b precursor were found to be up-regulated in the plasma of benzene exposed workers. When we treated Jurkat cells with benzene (10 microM-10 mM), TCR beta expression was increased in the membrane more than 6-9-fold compared to untreated cells. In addition, the amount of TCR beta released into the culture media, at benzene concentrations greater than 50 microM, increased up to 10 mM. Therefore, TCR beta levels in plasma could be used as a biomarker and a possible therapeutic target for benzene exposure.  相似文献   

6.
Joo WA  Sul D  Lee DY  Lee E  Kim CW 《Mutation research》2004,556(1-2):35-44
In this study, we analyzed the proteins in plasma of workers exposed to benzene by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, in the hope of finding a specific protein suitable for the biomonitoring of benzene exposure. Comet assays were also carried out to evaluate lymphocytes DNA damage. Fifty workers from a printing company and 38 matched unexposed healthy subjects were enrolled in the study. DNA damage was found to be significantly higher in the exposed workers than in the controls. The tail moments of the two groups were 2.07 +/- 0.35 and 1.48 +/- 0.41, respectively (P < 0.0001). The mean values of trans, trans-muconic acid (t,t-MA) in workers exposed to benzene and in unexposed subjects were 1.011 +/- 0.249 and 0.026 +/- 0.028 mg/g creatinine, respectively. Protein profiles were significantly different (P < 0.05) in the two groups, as identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry and confirmed by Western blot. T cell receptor beta chain (TCR beta), FK506-binding protein (FKBP51) and matrix metalloproteinase-13 (MMP13) were found to be up-regulated in the benzene-exposed workers. In addition, the correlation between TCR beta and the tail moments of lymphocytes was statistically significant (r-value, 0.428). We conclude that TCR beta in plasma could be used for the early detection of exposure to benzene.  相似文献   

7.
Studies were carried out on two populations occupationally exposed to ethylene oxide (EtO) using different physical and biological parameters. Blood samples were collected from 9 hospital workers (EI) and 15 factory workers (EII) engaged in sterilization of medical equipment with EtO and from matched controls (CI and CII). Average exposure levels during 4 months (the lifespan of erythrocytes) prior to blood sampling were estimated from levels of N-(2-hydroxyethyl)valine adducts in hemoglobin. They were significantly enhanced in EI and EII and corresponded to a 40-h time-weighted average of 0.025 ppm in EI and 5 ppm in EII. Exposures were usually received in bursts with EtO concentrations in air ranging from 22 to 72 ppm in EI and 14 to 400 ppm in EII. All samples were analyzed for HPRT mutants (MFs), chromosomal aberrations (CAs), micronuclei (MN) and SCEs. MFs were significantly enhanced by 60% in EII but not in EI. These results are the first demonstration of mutation induction in man by ethylene oxide. CAs were significantly enhanced in EI and EII by 130% and 260% respectively. MN were not enhanced in EI but significantly in EII(217%). The mean frequency of SCEs was significantly elevated by 20% in EI and by almost 100% in EII. SCE was the only parameter that allowed distinction between daily and occasionally exposed workers in EII. An interesting finding in exposed workers was the large increase of the percentage of cells with high frequencies of SCE (3–4 times in EI and 17-fold in EII).

The relative sensitivity of endpoints for detection of EtO exposure in the present investigation was in the following order: HOEtVal adducts > SCEs > chromosomal aberrations > micronuclei > HPRT mutants.  相似文献   


8.
We investigated the association between the individual concentrations of benzene in the breathing zone and the concentrations of benzene in the blood and urine among workers maintaining crude oil cargo tanks. Benzene exposure was measured during three consecutive 12h work days among 13 tank workers and 9 unexposed referents (catering section). Blood and urine samples were collected pre-shift on the first day, post-shift on the third day, and pre-next shift on the following morning. The workers used half-mask air-purifying respirators, but not all workers used these systematically. The individual geometric mean benzene exposure in the breathing zone of tank workers over 3 days was 0.15 ppm (range 0.01-0.62 ppm). The tank workers' post-shift geometric mean benzene concentrations were 12.3 nmol/l in blood and 27.0 nmol/l in urine versus 0.7 nmol/l for both blood and urine among the referents. Benzene in the work atmosphere was highly correlated with the internal concentration of benzene both in post-shift blood (r=0.87, P<0.001) and post-shift urine (r=0.90, P<0.001), indicating that the varying use of respirators did not explain much of the variability in absorbed benzene. The results showed that, despite low benzene exposure in this work atmosphere and the use of personal protective equipment to a varying degree, the tank workers had a significant uptake of benzene that correlated highly with benzene exposure. The internal concentration of benzene was higher than expected considering the measured individual benzene exposure, probably due to an extended work schedule of 12h and physical strain during tank work. Control measures should be improved for processes, which impose a potential for increased absorption of benzene upon the workers.  相似文献   

9.
Sul D  Lee E  Lee MY  Oh E  Im H  Lee J  Jung WW  Won N  Kang HS  Kim EM  Kang SK 《Mutation research》2005,582(1-2):61-70
Benzene causes many kinds of blood disorders in workers employed in many different environments. These diseases include myelodisplastic syndrome and acute and chronic myelocytic leukemia. In the present study, five occupational work places, including six industrial process types, namely, printing, shoe-making, methylene di-aniline (MDA), nitrobenzene, carbomer, and benzene production were selected, and the levels of breath benzene, and trans,trans-muconic acids (t,t-MA) and phenol in urine were evaluated, as well as hematological changes and lymphocyte DNA damage. The concentration of benzene in breath was less than 3 ppm in the workplaces, and benzene exposure was found to be higher in work places where benzene is used, than in those where benzene is produced. At low levels of benzene exposure, urinary t,t-MA correlated strongly with benzene in air. Highest Olive tail moments were found in workers producing carbomer. Levels of breathzone benzene were found to be strongly correlated with Olive tail moment values in the lymphocytes of workers, but not with hematological data in the six workplaces types. In conclusion, the highest benzene exposures found occurred in workers at a company, which utilized benzene in the production of carbomer. In terms of low levels of exposure to benzene, urinary t,t-MA and DNA damage exhibited a strong correlation with breath benzene, but not with hematological data. We conclude that breath benzene, t,t-MA and lymphocytic DNA damage are satisfactory biomonitoring markers with respect to benzene exposure in the workplace.  相似文献   

10.
Rats were exposed to benzene vapour at nominal concentrations in air of 1, 10, 100 and 1000 ppm acutely for 6 h. Bone marrow cells from each animal were examined for chromosomal abnormalities 24 h after the end of the exposure period. This analysis was carried out on 250 metaphases per animal where possible and showed a significant increase in the percentage of cells with chromosomal abnormalities, excluding gaps, in the groups of animals exposed to 100 and 1000 ppm benzene. In the 10-ppm and 1-ppm exposure groups there were elevated levels of cells with abnormalities which showed evidence of being dose-related, although they were not statistically significant.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Abstract

The aim of this work was to investigate urinary analytes and haemoglobin and albumin adducts as biomarkers of exposure to airborne styrene (Sty) and styrene-(7,8)-oxide (StyOX) and to evaluate the influence of smoking habit and genetic polymorphism of metabolic enzymes GSTM1 and GSTT1 on these biomarkers. We obtained three or four air and urine samples from each exposed worker (eight reinforced plastics workers and 13 varnish workers), one air and urine samples from 22 control workers (automobile mechanics) and one blood sample from all subjects. Median levels of exposure to Sty and StyOX, respectively, were 18.2 mg m?3 and 133 µg m?3 for reinforced plastics workers, 3.4 mg m?3 and 12 µg m?3 for varnish workers, and <0.3 mg m?3 and <5 µg m?3 for controls. Urinary levels of styrene, mandelic acid, phenylglyoxylic acid, phenylglycine (PHG), 4-vinylphenol (VP) and mercapturic acids (M1+M2), as well as cysteinyl adducts of serum albumin (but not those of haemoglobin) were significantly associated with exposure status (controls相似文献   

13.
Women who use the 'hot wire' and 'cool rod' machines to wrap meat in supermarkets are potentially exposed to low levels of benzene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons present in fumes emitted during the thermal decomposition of the plastic used to wrap meat. In order to evaluate whether the benzene metabolite trans, trans-muconic acid (MA) can be used to monitor these low levels, we collected urine samples from supermarket workers, and assayed the urine for MA. Geometric mean after-shift MA levels were highest for subjects who used the 'hot wire' machine, i.e. > 300 ng mg-1 creatinine (Cr). The corresponding levels for subjects who used the 'cool rod' machine were similar to those for subjects who did not use either type of machine, and were much lower. These results indicate that urinary muconic acid has some potential for use in monitoring benzene exposures of less than 1 part per million (ppm). The study detected very high background MA levels (exceeding 2000 ng mg-1 Cr) in some subjects, suggesting that individuals in the general population without occupational exposure to benzene may have urinary MA levels equivalent to exposure to up to 2 ppm benzene in ambient air. However, since non-benzene sources of the metabolite cannot be completely ruled out as partially responsible for these high levels, the public health significance of this finding is not known at the moment.  相似文献   

14.
14 fiberglass-reinforced plastics (FRP) boatbuilders were compared with 9 unexposed controls with respect to several chemical specific and nonspecific biomarkers measured in peripheral blood. Biomarkers included styrene-hemoglobin adducts (styrene-Hb), sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs), micronuclei (MN), single-strand breaks (SSBs) and N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene-induced DNA binding (NA-AAF binding) as a measure of susceptibility to DNA damage. Workers' exposures averaged 11 ppm (8-h TWA; geometric mean) and ranged from 0.6 to 44 p.p.m. Mandelic acid levels were measured in end-of-shift urine samples and reflected an average styrene exposure equivalent to 15 p.p.m. There was a large though not significant difference in levels of styrene-Hb adducts among exposed workers and controls, largely the consequence of a single heavily-exposed individual with an extremely high level of adducts. Significant differences between biomarker levels in exposed workers and controls were observed with MN, SSBs and NA-AAF binding. No significant differences were seen in mean levels of SCEs nor in the incidence of cells with a high frequency of SCEs. The data suggest that exposure to levels of styrene in occupational settings near or below the current OSHA standard (50 p.p.m.) can induce damage at the cellular/molecular level. Appropriately-selected panels of biomarkers can be useful in identifying potentially harmful exposures.  相似文献   

15.
The present work is focused on the determination of in vivo doses and studies of genetic effects in workers exposed to epichlorohydrin (ECH). The studied endpoints were hemoglobin (Hb) adducts, frequencies of hprt mutants, micronuclei in cytochalasin B blocked binucleated lymphocytes, sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) and high frequency cells (HFC). Blood samples were collected from office clerks and ECH exposed factory workers at an industrial plant in Germany. The workers were exposed to 0.11–0.23 ppm ECH in the air 45 h per week and to 0.2–2.6 ppm for 3 h per week. Some Swedish non-exposed subjects were also used for Hb adduct measurements. The genetic data, HFC and SCE, showed a significant difference between exposed and unexposed donors. In contrast to earlier studies on SCE, no impact of smoking was observed. Effects on micronuclei were on the borderline of significance, whereas there was no effect for HPRT mutants. The average Hb adduct level was higher in exposed than in non-exposed donors, although the difference was only significant when the exposed group was compared to Swedish controls. Smoking gave significantly increased adduct levels. The absence of significant correlations between individual data for Hb adducts and genetic effects, may be explained by the different periods of time covered by the responses in these endpoints. Whereas Hb adducts reflect the exposure during up to 4 months (i.e. the life span of human erythrocytes), the SCE, and particularly the HFC, seem to accumulate for years in a long-lived fraction of T-lymphocytes without DNA repair. Thus, the adduct data does not reflect the exposure backwards in time unless it can be shown that exposure conditions have remained unchanged. The origin of the background adduct levels in non-smoking control persons is at present not known.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated whether the presence of (+)-anti-benzo(a)pyrene diolepoxide adducts to serum albumin (BPDE-SA) among workers exposed to benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) and unexposed reference controls was influenced by genetic polymorphisms of cytochrome P4501A1 (CYP1A1), microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EHPX), glutathione S-transferases M1 (GSTM1) and P1 (GSTP1), all involved in BaP metabolism. Exposed workers had significantly higher levels of adducts (0.124 ± 0.02 fmol BPTmg?1 SA, mean ± SE) and a higher proportion of detectable adducts (40.3%) than controls (0.051 ± 0.01 fmol BPT mg?1 SA; 16.1%) (p = 0:014 and p = 0:012). Smoking increased adduct levels only in occupationally exposed workers with the GSTM1 deletion (GSTM1 null) (p = 0:034). Smokers from the exposed group had higher adduct levels when they were CYP1A1 *1/*1 wild-type rather than heterozygous and homozygous for the variant alleles (CYP1A1 *1/*2 plus *2/*2) (p = 0:01). The dependence of BPDE-SA adduct levels and frequency on the CYP1A1 *1/*1 genotype was most pronounced in GSTM1-deficient smokers. Exposed workers with GSTM1 null/GSTP1 variant alleles had fewer detectable adducts than those with the GSTM1 null/GSTP1*A wild-type allele, supporting for the first time the recent in vitro finding that GSTP1 variants may be more effective in the detoxification of BPDE than the wild-type allele. Logistic regression analysis indicated that occupational exposure, wild-type CYP1A1*1/*1 allele and the combination of GSTM1 null genotype+EHPX genotypes associated with predicted low enzyme activity were significant predictors of BPDE-SA adducts. Though our findings should be viewed with caution because of the relatively limited size of the population analysed, the interaction between these polymorphic enzymes and BPDE-SA adducts seems to be specific for high exposure and might have an impact on the quantitative risk estimates for exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.  相似文献   

17.
Results of a recent molecular epidemiological study of 1,3-butadiene (BD) exposed Czech workers, conducted to compare female to male responses, have confirmed and extended the findings of a previously reported males only study (HEI Research Report 116, 2003). The initial study found that urine concentrations of the metabolites 1,2-dihydroxy-4-(acetyl) butane (M1) and 1-dihydroxy-2-(N-acetylcysteinyl)-3-butene (M2) and blood concentrations of the hemoglobin adducts N-[2-hydroxy-3-butenyl] valine (HB-Val) and N-[2,3,4-trihydroxy-butyl] valine (THB-Val) constitute excellent biomarkers of exposure, both being highly correlated with BD exposure levels, and that GST genotypes modulate at least one metabolic pathway, but that irreversible genotoxic effects such as chromosome aberrations and HPRT gene mutations are neither associated with BD exposure levels nor with worker genotypes (GST [glutathione-S-transferase]-M1, GSTT1, CYP2E1 (5' promoter), CYP2E1 (intron 6), EH [epoxide hydrolase] 113, EH139, ADH [alcohol dehydrogenase]2 and ADH3). The no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) for chromosome aberrations and HPRT mutations was 1.794 mg/m(3) (0.812 ppm)--the mean exposure level for the highest exposed worker group in this initial study. The second Czech study, reported here, initiated in 2003, included 26 female control workers, 23 female BD exposed workers, 25 male control workers and 30 male BD exposed workers (some repeats from the first study). Multiple external exposure measurements (10 full 8-h shift measures by personal monitoring per worker) over a 4-month period before biological sample collections showed that BD workplace levels were lower than in the first study. Mean 8-h TWA exposure levels were 0.008 mg/m(3) (0.0035 ppm) and 0.397 mg/m(3) (0.180 ppm) for female controls and exposed, respectively, but with individual single 8-h TWA values up to 9.793 mg/m(3) (4.45 ppm) in the exposed group. Mean male 8-h TWA exposure levels were 0.007 mg/m(3) (0.0032 ppm) and 0.808 mg/m(3) (0.370 ppm) for controls and exposed, respectively; however, the individual single 8-h TWA values up to 12.583 mg/m(3) (5.72 ppm) in the exposed group. While the urine metabolite concentrations for both M1 and M2 were elevated in exposed compared to control females, the differences were not significant, possibly due to the relatively low BD exposure levels. For males, with greater BD exposures, the concentrations of both metabolites were significantly elevated in urine from exposed compared to control workers. As in the first study, urine metabolite excretion patterns in both sexes revealed conjugation to be the minor detoxification pathway (yielding the M2 metabolite) but both M1 and M2 concentration values were lower in males in this second study compared to their concentrations in the first, reflecting the lower external exposures of males in this second study compared to the first. Of note, females showed lower concentrations of both M1 and M2 metabolites in the urine per unit of BD exposure than did males while exhibiting the same M1/(M1+M2) ratio, reflecting the same relative utilization of the hydrolytic (producing M1) and the conjugation (producing M2) detoxification pathways as males. Assays for the N,N-(2,3-dihydroxy-1,4-butadyl) valine (pyr-Val) hemoglobin (Hb) adduct, which is specific for the highly genotoxic 1,2,3,4-diepoxybutane (DEB) metabolite of BD, have been conducted on blood samples from all participants in this second Czech study. Any adduct that may have been present was below the limits of quantitation (LOQ) for this assay for all samples, indicating that production of this important BD metabolite in humans is below levels produced in both mice and rats exposed to as little as 1.0 ppm BD by inhalation (J.A. Swenberg, M.G. Bird, R.J. Lewis, Future directions in butadiene risk assessment, Chem. Biol. Int. (2006), this issue). Results of assays for the HB-Val and THB-Val hemoglobin adducts are pending. HPRT mutations, determined by cloning assays, and multiple measures of chromosome level changes (sister-chromatid exchanges [SCE], aberrations determined by conventional methods and FISH) again showed no associations with BD exposures, confirming the findings of the initial study that these irreversible genotoxic changes do not arise in humans occupationally exposed to low levels of BD. Except for lower production of both urine metabolites in females, no female-male differences in response to BD exposures were detected in this study. As in the initial study, there were no significant genotype associations with the irreversible genotoxic endpoints. However, as in the first, differences in the metabolic detoxification of BD as reflected in relative amounts of the M1 and M2 urinary metabolites were associated with genotypes, this time both GST and EH.  相似文献   

18.
Women who use the 'hot wire' and 'cool rod' machines to wrap meat in supermarkets are potentially exposed to low levels of benzene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons present in fumes emitted during the thermal decomposition of the plastic used to wrap meat. In order to evaluate whether the benzene metabolite trans, trans-muconic acid (MA) can be used to monitor these low levels, we collected urine samples from supermarket workers, and assayed the urine for MA. Geometric mean after-shift MA levels were highest for subjects who used the 'hot wire' machine, i.e. &gt; 300 ng mg-1 creatinine (Cr). The corresponding levels for subjects who used the 'cool rod' machine were similar to those for subjects who did not use either type of machine, and were much lower. These results indicate that urinary muconic acid has some potential for use in monitoring benzene exposures of less than 1 part per million (ppm). The study detected very high background MA levels (exceeding 2000 ng mg-1 Cr) in some subjects, suggesting that individuals in the general population without occupational exposure to benzene may have urinary MA levels equivalent to exposure to up to 2 ppm benzene in ambient air. However, since non-benzene sources of the metabolite cannot be completely ruled out as partially responsible for these high levels, the public health significance of this finding is not known at the moment.  相似文献   

19.
Benzene is an occupational hazard and environmental toxicant found in cigarette smoke, gasoline, and the chemical industry. The major health concern associated with benzene exposure is leukemia. The toxic effects of benzene are dependent on its metabolism by the cytochrome P450 enzyme system. Previous research has identified CYP2E1 as the primary P450 isozyme responsible for benzene metabolism at low concentrations, whereas CYP2B1 is involved at higher concentrations. Our studies using microsomal preparations from human, mouse, and rat indicate that CYP2E1 is the P450 isozyme primarily responsible for benzene metabolism in lung and in liver. CYP2B isozymes have little involvement in benzene metabolism by either lung or liver. Our results also indicate that isozymes of the CYP2F subfamily may play a role in benzene metabolism by lung.  相似文献   

20.
Benzene is an occupational and environmental toxicant. The main human health concern associated with benzene exposure is leukemia. The toxic effects of benzene are dependent on its metabolism by the cytochrome p450 enzyme system. The cytochrome p450 enzymes CYP2E1 and CYP2F2 are the major contributors to the bioactivation of benzene in rats and mice. Although benzene metabolism has been shown to occur with mouse and human lung microsomal preparations, little is known about the ability of human CYP2F to metabolize benzene or the lung cell types that might activate this toxicant. Our studies compared bronchiolar derived (BEAS-2B) and alveolar derived (A549) human cell lines for benzene metabolizing ability by evaluating the roles of CYP2E1 and CYP2F1. BEAS-2B cells that overexpressed CYP2F1 and recombinant CYP2F1 were also evaluated. BEAS-2B cells overexpressing the enzyme CYP2F1 produced 47.4 +/- 14.7 pmols hydroxylated metabolite/10(6) cells/45 min. The use of the CYP2E1-selective inhibitor diethyldithiocarbamate and the CYP2F2-selective inhibitor 5-phenyl-1-pentyne demonstrated that both CYP2E1 and CYP2F1 are important in benzene metabolism in the BEAS-2B and A549 human lung cell lines. The recombinant expressed human CYP2F1 enzyme had a K(m) value of 3.83 microM and a V(max) value of 0.01 pmol/pmol p450 enzyme/min demonstrating a reasonably efficient catalysis of benzene metabolism (V(max)/K(m) = 2.6). Thus, these studies have demonstrated in human lung cell lines that benzene is bioactivated by two lung-expressed p450 enzymes.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号