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Filtered air cuts down mutations.


Here's another possible reason to be concerned about airborne particulates: The microscopic particles cause heritable her·i·ta·ble
adj.
1. Capable of being passed from one generation to the next; hereditary.

2. Capable of inheriting or taking by inheritance.
 mutations by damaging the DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 of cells that give rise to sperm, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a study of mice exposed to air pollution near an industrial site.

Soot and other particulates of various sizes have previously been linked to an array of health problems, including asthma and heart attacks (SN: 8/2/03, p. 72). One sign of possible genetic damage showed up about a decade ago, when James S. Quinn of McMaster University McMaster University, at Hamilton, Ont., Canada; nondenominational; founded 1887. It has faculties of humanities, science, social sciences, business, engineering, and health sciences, as well as a school of graduate studies and a divinity college.  in Hamilton, Ontario, found an abnormally large number of mutations in herring gulls nesting near steel mills. In 2002, he and his colleagues reported that laboratory mice raised near the same mills also had more mutations in their eggs and sperm, or germ cells, than ones raised in rural areas did. The researchers didn't discern whether gases, such as sulfur dioxide sulfur dioxide, chemical compound, SO2, a colorless gas with a pungent, suffocating odor. It is readily soluble in cold water, sparingly soluble in hot water, and soluble in alcohol, acetic acid, and sulfuric acid. , or particulates were to blame.

In its latest mouse study, Quinn's group performed the same comparison of germ cell-mutation rates but added groups of mice breathing the local air filtered of particulates but not gases.

In the May 14 Science, Quinn and his colleagues report more germ-cell mutations in the mice raised in an industrial setting than in those raised in a rural environment. However, the mutation rate In genetics, the mutation rate is the chance of a mutation occurring in an organism or gene in each generation (or, in the case of multicellular organisms, cell division). See Luria-Delbrück experiment.  for animals getting filtered air near the mills was comparable to that of the groups raised at the rural site.

This indicates that it's particulates in the air, not gases, that are doing the DNA damage, the researchers conclude.

The mutations observed occur in so-called marker-DNA sequences, which have no apparent biological role, so it's not clear that the particulates are also damaging genes related to the animals' health, cautions Quinn.--J.T.
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Title Annotation:Environment
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:May 22, 2004
Words:290
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