4.3 Article

An Investigation of the Wild Rat Crown Incisor as an Indicator of Lead (Pb) Exposure Using Inductively Couple Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS) and Laser Ablation ICP-MS

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18020767

Keywords

lead; incisor; biomarker; sentinel; wild rodent

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [16H01779, 18K19847, 18KK0287, 17K20038, 18H04132, 17KK0009, 20K20633, 19H01081Y]
  2. foundation of JSPS Bilateral Open Partnership Joint Research Projects [JPJSBP120209902]
  3. Japan Prize Foundation
  4. Hokkaido University SOUSEI Support Program for Young Researchers in FY2020
  5. JST/JICA SATREPS (Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development) [JPMJSA1501]
  6. aXis (Accelerating Social Implementation for SDGs Achievement) - JST [JPMJAS2001]
  7. Program for supporting introduction of the new sharing system [JPMXS0420100619]
  8. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20K20633, 17K20038, 17KK0009, 18KK0287, 18H04132, 16H01779, 18K19847] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study found that the crown of rat incisors accumulated more lead than the root, and levels of lead in the blood were positively correlated with lead content in the incisors. In wild rats, lead accumulation in the incisor crown decreased with distance from the abandoned lead-zinc mine, and Pb-T was strongly correlated with blood lead levels. Laser ablation ICP-MS mapping revealed a homogenous distribution of lead in the incisor, with higher intensity localized in the tip of the incisor crown. These findings suggest that lead content in the crown incisor may reflect the rat's environmental habitat and serve as an indicator of lead exposure.
Lead (Pb) is a metal toxicant of great public health concern. The present study investigated the applicability of the rat incisor in Pb exposure screening. The levels of lead in teeth (Pb-T) in the crown and root of incisors in laboratory Pb-exposed Sprague Dawley rats were quantified using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The crown accumulated much Pb-T than the root of the Sprague Dawley rat incisor. The levels of lead in blood (Pb-B) were positively correlated with the Pb-T in the crown and root incisors of the Sprague Dawley rats. As an application of the Pb-T crown results in experimental rats, we subsequently analyzed the Pb-T in the crown incisors of Pb-exposed wild rats (Rattus rattus) sampled from residential sites within varying distances from an abandoned lead-zinc mine. The Pb-T accumulation in the crown of incisors of R. rattus rats decreased with increased distance away from the Pb-Zn mine. Furthermore, the Pb-T was strongly correlated (r = 0.85) with the Pb levels in the blood. Laser ablation ICP-MS Pb-T mappings revealed a homogenous distribution of Pb in the incisor with an increased intensity of Pb-T localized in the tip of the incisor crown bearing an enamel surface in both Sprague Dawley and R. rattus rats. These findings suggest that Pb-T in the crown incisor may be reflective of the rat's environmental habitat, thus a possible indicator of Pb exposure.

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