Seasonal and spatial variations in human cell mutagenicity of respirable airborne particles in the northeastern United States

Citation
Du. Pedersen et al., Seasonal and spatial variations in human cell mutagenicity of respirable airborne particles in the northeastern United States, ENV SCI TEC, 33(24), 1999, pp. 4407-4415
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Environment/Ecology,"Environmental Engineering & Energy
Journal title
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
ISSN journal
0013936X → ACNP
Volume
33
Issue
24
Year of publication
1999
Pages
4407 - 4415
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-936X(199912)33:24<4407:SASVIH>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Samples of respirable airborne particles (similar in size to PM2.5) were co llected at five sites in the northeastern United States every sixth day dur ing 1995 and tested in a mutagenicity assay based on human cells. Three sit es were located in Massachusetts: in downtown Boston, in a suburban area 20 km to the north, and in a rural area 100 km west of Boston. The other two sites were located in downtown Rochester in upstate New York a nd in a rura l a rea 35 km to the west. Bimonthly composite samples (10-11 sampling days per composite) were extracted in organic solvents and tested for mutagenic ity at the thymidine kinase locus in h1A1v2 cells, a line of human B-lympho blasts that constitutively expresses P450 CYP1A1 cDNA. Mutagenicity levels were significantly higher in winter than in summer at all sites, both per m icrogram of airborne particulate organic carbon (OC) and per cubic meter of air. Mutagenicity per microgram of OC was significantly inversely correlat ed with air temperature (r = -0.95 in NY, r = -0.40 in MA) and ambient conc entrations of OC (r = -0.4). Annual averages of mutagenicity per microgram of OC in upstate New York were roughly 2-fold higher than in Massachusetts; however, no clear intrastate spatial Variations were evident. Mutagenicity per cubic meter of air showed an increase of roughly 1.5-2-fold from rural areas to urban centers within each state. This increase was influenced by higher OC concentrations in the urban locations (up to 2-fold) but not by h igher mutagenicity per microgram of OC. These results indicate that cold we ather is significantly correlated with the human cell mutagenicity of respi rable particles in the northeastern United States and further show that pop ulations of urban centers in this region are exposed to higher levels of ai rborne human cell mutagens than in nearby rural areas.