Whole-body inhalation of nano-sized carbon black: a surrogate model of military burn pit exposure

Author:

Trembley Janeen H.,So Simon W.,Nixon Joshua P.,Bowdridge Elizabeth C.,Garner Krista L.,Griffith Julie,Engles Kevin J.,Batchelor Thomas P.,Goldsmith William T.,Tomáška Julie M.,Hussain Salik,Nurkiewicz Timothy R.,Butterick Tammy A.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objective Chronic multisymptom illness (CMI) is an idiopathic disease affecting thousands of U.S. Veterans exposed to open-air burn pits emitting aerosolized particulate matter (PM) while serving in Central and Southwest Asia and Africa. Exposure to burn pit PM can result in profound biologic consequences including chronic fatigue, impaired cognition, and respiratory diseases. Dysregulated or unresolved inflammation is a possible underlying mechanism for CMI onset. We describe a rat model of whole-body inhalation exposure using carbon black nanoparticles (CB) as a surrogate for military burn pit-related exposure. Using this model, we measured biomarkers of inflammation in multiple tissues. Results Male Sprague Dawley rats were exposed to CB aerosols by whole body inhalation (6 ± 0.83 mg/m3). Proinflammatory biomarkers were measured in multiple tissues including arteries, brain, lung, and plasma. Biomarkers of cardiovascular injury were also assayed in plasma. CB inhalation exposure increased CMI-related proinflammatory biomarkers such as IFN-γ and TNFα in multiple tissue samples. CB exposure also induced cardiovascular injury markers (adiponectin, MCP1, sE-Selectin, sICam-1 and TIMP1) in plasma. These findings support the validity of our animal exposure model for studies of burn pit-induced CMI. Future studies will model more complex toxicant mixtures as documented at multiple burn pit sites.

Funder

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

National Institutes of Health

Center for Veterans Research & Education

Burn Pits 360 Veterans Organization

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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