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Mortality in dioxin-exposed mice infected with influenza: mitochondrial toxicity (reye's-like syndrome) versus enhanced inflammation as the mode of action.
Authors:Robert W Luebke  Carey B Copeland  Lisa R Bishop  Mary J Daniels  M Ian Gilmour
Affiliation:Immunotoxicology Branch, Experimental Toxicology Division, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, NC 27711, USA. luebke.robert@epa.gov
Abstract:Increased mortality following influenza A infection was reported in B6C3F1 mice exposed to a low (0.01 micro g/kg) dose of dioxin. However, mortality was not associated with increased viral load and antibody titers to the virus were not decreased at doses of TCDD < or = 10 micro g/kg, suggesting that viral overgrowth, secondary to immunosuppression, was not the proximate cause of death. We tested the hypothesis that mitochondrial toxicity and dysfunction, similar to Reye's syndrome (RS) in humans, is responsible for increased mortality in dioxin-exposed, infected B6C3F1 female mice, based on similarities in the biochemical and immunological events that occur in RS and in TCDD-exposed animals. Endpoints were also included to test the hypothesis that increased pulmonary inflammation following dioxin exposure, in the absence of mitochondrial toxicity, was associated with increased mortality. Dose-related effects of TCDD alone, infection with influenza A alone, and combined TCDD exposure/influenza infection were evaluated. Mice were given a single ip injection of 0, 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, or 1.0 micro g TCDD/kg, 7 days before infection by intranasal instillation of an estimated LD(10-20) of influenza A Hong Kong/8/68 (H3N2) and were terminated 1, 7, and 10 days after infection. Serum, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), and lung tissue were collected for various measurements, including clinical chemistries, cell counts, cytokine analysis, and viral titers. Exposure to < or = 1.0 micro g TCDD/kg did not increase mortality; virus titers were similar at all doses of TCDD and there was no dioxin-related effect on serum NH(3) or glucose concentrations, two prominent indicators of the altered mitochondrial oxidative metabolism typically observed in RS. A study was therefore conducted over a wider range of TCDD doses. A single injection of 0, 0.025, 0.5, or 10 micro g TCDD/kg preceded infection by 7 days; subgroups of noninfected control and highest dose group (10 micro g TCDD/kg) mice were also evaluated for biochemical and immunological endpoints on the equivalent of infection day 4 to provide baseline data. Five days after infection the same endpoints described above were evaluated. The 10 micro g TCDD/kg dose increased mortality, but once again did not increase virus titer; as in previous experiments, serum biochemistry endpoints did not support mitochondrial dysfunction. These results suggest that RS is an unlikely explanation for increased influenza mortality in TCDD-exposed mice. Rather, constituents in BALF implicate increased pulmonary inflammation as the mode of TCDD action.
Keywords:dioxin   immunotoxicity   host resistance   Reye's Syndrome   influenza infection   pulmonary inflammation.
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