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Carbon concerns: nanotubes cause cardiovascular damage.


Lung deposition of single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), one of the most commonly used materials in nanotechnology, is already known to cause localized toxic effects. Now scientists have demonstrated that such deposition also leads to cardiovascular damage in mice, including accelerated formation of atherosclerotic plaques [EHP EHP
abbr.
1. effective horsepower

2. electric horsepower
 115:377-382; Li et al.]. The findings add to concerns that exposure to SWCNTs could result in systemic toxic effects.

The team conducted a series of experiments, instilling SWCNTs into the lungs of mice. In an initial screen for extrapulmonary effects, Ho1-luc reporter transgenic mice were exposed to single SWCNT (Single-Walled Carbon NanoTube) See nanotube.  doses of 10 or 40 [micro]g. Heme heme: see coenzyme.  oxygenase-1 (HO-1) gene expression, a biomarker of oxidative stress, was activated in the animals' lung, aorta, and heart tissue at 7 days post-exposure, declining to control levels by day 28. This held with pulmonary toxicity studies showing an early, transitory inflammatory response.

The same dosing scheme was used in experiments with the commonly used C57BL/6 mouse, which showed dose-dependent aortic aortic

pertaining to or emanating from the aorta. See also aortic arch.


aortic aneurysm
occurs most often in dogs, where it is caused by Spirocerca lupi larvae, turkeys and primates, causing dyspnea, cyanosis and coughing.
 mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage at 7, 28, and 60 days post-exposure. mtDNA is highly susceptible to oxidative damage, considered to be an initiating event in atherogenesis atherogenesis /ath·ero·gen·e·sis/ (-jen´e-sis) formation of atheromatous lesions in arterial walls.atherogen´ic

ath·er·o·gen·e·sis
n.
. Among the treatment groups, glutathione glutathione: see coenzyme.  and protein carbonyl carbonyl /car·bon·yl/ (kahr´bah-nil) the bivalent organic radical, C:O, characteristic of aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acid, and esters.

car·bon·yl
n.
The bivalent radical CO.
 levels--two other indicators of oxidative stress--were also significantly reduced and increased, respectively, adding to the evidence that exposure to SWCNTs can lead to oxidative insult. Exposure to comparable doses of ultra-fine carbon black particles in a control group produced no such damage to aortic mtDNA.

The group then tested the effects of SWCNT exposure in Apo[E.sup.-/-] mice, a widely used model of human atherosclerosis. They exposed the mice to 20 [micro]g of SWCNTs once every other week for 8 weeks. Then the mice were fed either a regular chow diet or a high-fat diet for the first half of that period to induce the elevated lipid concentrations that often precede atherosclerosis. Although SWCNT exposure was not associated with changes in the animals' lipid profiles, the exposed mice on the high-fat regimen did exhibit accelerated plaque formation in the aorta and brachiocephalic arteries compared with controls.

The researchers note that the cardiovascular effects resulting from SWCNT exposure could be either direct, as a result of translocation translocation /trans·lo·ca·tion/ (trans?lo-ka´shun) the attachment of a fragment of one chromosome to a nonhomologous chromosome. Abbreviated t.  of particles from the lung into the systemic circulation, or indirect, caused by the release of inflammatory mediators in the lung or by altered pulmonary function (although no increase in several measured inflammatory mediators was detected in the exposed animals). Whichever mechanism may be at work, these data show that lung deposition of SWCNTs, a possible workplace exposure scenario, can cause systemic damage and may contribute to cardiovascular disease.
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Title Annotation:Science Selections
Author:Hood, Ernie
Publication:Environmental Health Perspectives
Date:Mar 1, 2007
Words:435
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