4.3 Article

In Vitro Effects of Particulate Matter Associated with a Wildland Fire in the North-West of Italy

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182010812

关键词

forest fire; genotoxicity; mutagenicity; endocrine disruptors; particulate matter; air pollution; cytotoxicity; biological assays; BEAS-2B cells; MELN cells

资金

  1. ARPA Piemonte
  2. University of Torino

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The study found that wildfires may have significant impacts on human health, worsening air quality, increasing PM concentrations, and causing mutagenic and estrogenic effects, although no cytotoxicity or DNA damage was observed.
Wildland fires, increasing in recent decades in the Mediterranean region due to climate change, can contribute to PM levels and composition. This study aimed to investigate biological effects of PM2.5 (empty set & nbsp;< 2.5 mu m) and PM10 (empty set & nbsp;< 10 mu m) collected near a fire occurred in the North-West of Italy in 2017 and in three other areas (urban and rural areas). Organic extracts were assessed for mutagenicity using Ames test (TA98 and TA100 strains), cell viability (WST-1 and LDH assays) and genotoxicity (Comet assay) with human bronchial cells (BEAS-2B) and estrogenic activity using a gene reporter assay (MELN cells). In all sites, high levels of PM10 and PM2.5 were measured during the fire suggesting that near and distant sites were influenced by fire pollutants. The PM10 and PM2.5 extracts induced a significant mutagenicity in all sites and the mutagenic effect was increased with respect to historical data. All extracts induced a slight increase of the estrogenic activity but a possible antagonistic activity of PM samples collected near fire was observed. No cytotoxicity or DNA damage was detected. Results confirm that fires could be relevant for human health, since they can worsen the air quality increasing PM concentrations, mutagenic and estrogenic effects.

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