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Nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species production causes progressive damage in rats after cessation of silica inhalation.
Authors:Dale W Porter  Lyndell L Millecchia  Patsy Willard  Victor A Robinson  Dawn Ramsey  Jeffery McLaurin  Amir Khan  Kurt Brumbaugh  Christoper M Beighley  Alexander Teass  Vincent Castranova
Affiliation:National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Health Effects Laboratory Division, Morgantown, WV 26505, USA. DPorter@cdc.gov
Abstract:Our laboratory has previously reported results from a rat silica inhalation study which determined that, even after silica exposure ended, pulmonary inflammation and damage progressed with subsequent fibrosis development. In the present study, the relationship between silica exposure, nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and the resultant pulmonary damage is investigated in this model. Rats were exposed to silica (15 mg/m3, 6 h/day) for either 20, 40, or 60 days. A portion of the rats from each exposure were sacrificed at 0 days postexposure, while another portion was maintained without further exposure for 36 days to examine recovery or progression. The major findings of this study are: (1) silica-exposed rat lungs were in a state of oxidative stress, the severity of which increased during the postexposure period, (2) silica-exposed rats had significant increase in lung NO production which increased in magnitude during the postexposure period, and (3) the presence of silica particle(s) in an alveolar macrophage (AM) was highly associated with inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) protein. These data indicate that, even after silica exposure has ended, and despite declining silica lung burden, silica-induced pulmonary NO and ROS production increases, thus producing a more severe oxidative stress. A quantitative association between silica and expression of iNOS protein in AMs was also determined, which adds to our previous observation that iNOS and NO-mediated damage are associated anatomically with silica-induced pathological lesions. Future studies will be needed to determine whether the progressive oxidative stress, and iNOS activation and NO production, is a direct result of silica lung burden or a consequence of silica-induced biochemical mediators.
Keywords:rat   silica inhalation   nitric oxide   reactive oxygen species   oxidative stress.
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