Volatile organic compounds cytotoxicity and expression of HSP72, HSP90 and GRP78 stress proteins in cultured human cells. (33/370)

The aim of this study was to determine whether overexpression of stress proteins (SPs) could be a sensitive biomarker for cell injury due to exposure to low doses of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, xylene, and chlorinated derivatives (ClB). Sublethal and cytotoxic threshold concentrations of the VOCs were determined by studying the growth rate of normal (fibroblasts) or tumor-derived human cell lines (A549, HepG2) exposed for 4 days to VOCs. Changes in SP expression as a function of concentrations were investigated by Western blotting.VOC toxicity was found to be correlated with their degree of chlorination and their hydrophobicity. Cytotoxic threshold concentrations (no-observed effect concentration, NOEC) were found to be similar for the three cell lines. It was observed that using a mixture of VOCs, each of them at concentration below the NOEC, resulted in an actual toxicity to the cells. This finding reveals a synergistic effect and should be taken into account when assessing threshold risk and exposure limit values in the worker's environment when several pollutants may be present. HSP72 and HSP90 expression levels were not affected whereas GRP78 expression was increased by all the VOCs. Taking into account the specific molecular function of GRP78, it suggests that VOC exposure results in misfolded or underglycosylated protein accumulation in the endoplasmic reticulum. GRP78 overexpression was closely related to the magnitude of growth inhibition due to increasing concentrations of each VOC. The overexpression was found to be significant for concentrations 5 to 30 times higher than NOEC, indicating that, under our experimental conditions, GRP78 expression cannot be considered as a sensitive biomarker of exposure to environmental VOCs.  (+info)

Block of voltage-operated sodium channels by 2,6-dimethylphenol, a structural analogue of lidocaine's aromatic tail. (34/370)

1. The structural features that determine the state-dependent interaction of local anaesthetics with voltage-operated sodium channels are still a matter of debate. We have studied the blockade of sodium channels by 2,6-dimethylphenol, a phenol derivative which resembles the aromatic tail of lidocaine, etidocaine, and bupivacaine. 2. The effects of 2,6-dimethylphenol were studied on heterologously (HEK 293) expressed rat neuronal (rat brain IIA) and human skeletal muscle (hSkM1) sodium channels using whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments. 3. 2,6-Dimethylphenol was effective in blocking whole-cell sodium inward currents. Its potency was comparable to the potency of lidocaine previously obtained with similar protocols by others. The IC(50) at -70 mV holding potential was 150 and 187 microM for the skeletal muscle and the neuronal isoform, respectively. In both isoforms, the blocking potency increased with the fraction of inactivated channels at depolarized holding potentials. However, the block achieved at -70 mV with respect to -150 mV holding potential was significantly higher only in the skeletal muscle isoform. The estimated dissociation constant K(d) from the inactivated state was 25 microM and 28 microM in the skeletal muscle and the neuronal isoform, respectively. The kinetics of drug equilibration between resting and inactivated channel states were about 10 fold faster compared with lidocaine. 4. Our results show that the blockade induced by 2,6-dimethylphenol retains voltage-dependency, a typical feature of lidocaine-like local anaesthetics. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the 'aromatic tail' determines the state-dependent interaction of local anaesthetics with the sodium channel.  (+info)

Carbon and hydrogen stable isotope fractionation during aerobic bacterial degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons. (35/370)

13C/(12)C and D/H stable isotope fractionation during aerobic degradation was determined for Pseudomonas putida strain mt-2, Pseudomonas putida strain F1, Ralstonia pickettii strain PKO1, and Pseudomonas putida strain NCIB 9816 grown with toluene, xylenes, and naphthalene. Different types of initial reactions used by the respective bacterial strains could be linked with certain extents of stable isotope fractionation during substrate degradation.  (+info)

Are women more sensitive than men to 2-propanol and m-xylene vapours? (36/370)

AIMS: To evaluate possible differences between men and women in acute health effects after controlled short term chamber exposure to vapours of two common organic solvents. METHODS: Fifty six healthy volunteers (28 per sex) were exposed to 150 ppm 2-propanol, 50 ppm m-xylene, and clean air for two hours at rest. The subjects rated symptoms on a visual analogue scale before, during, and after the exposure. Blinking frequency was measured continuously during exposure. Pulmonary function, nasal swelling, inflammatory markers (lysozyme, eosinophilic cationic protein, myeloperoxidase, albumin) in nasal lavage and colour vision (Lanthony D-15 desaturated panel) were measured before and at 0 and 3 hours after the exposure. RESULTS: There were no significant sex differences in response to solvent exposure with respect to blinking frequency, lung diffusing capacity, nasal area and volume, inflammatory markers in nasal lavage, and colour vision. Increased symptoms were rated by both sexes for nearly all 10 questions during exposure to 2-propanol or m-xylene, most increases being significant at one time point at least. The rating of "discomfort in the throat or airways" increased more in women during exposure to 2-propanol or m-xylene. During exposure to 2-propanol the rating of "fatigue" was more increased in men after one hour, but more increased in women after two hours of exposure. With regard to pulmonary function, women had small but significant decreases in FVC, FEV(1)/FVC, and FEF(75) three hours after exposure to m-xylene, but only the decrease in FVC was significantly different from that in men. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that women are slightly more sensitive than men to the acute irritative effects of 2-propanol and m-xylene vapours.  (+info)

Guideline for Hand Hygiene in Health-Care Settings. Recommendations of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee and the HICPAC/SHEA/APIC/IDSA Hand Hygiene Task Force. Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America/Association for Professionals in Infection Control/Infectious Diseases Society of America. (37/370)

The Guideline for Hand Hygiene in Health-Care Settings provides health-care workers (HCWs) with a review of data regarding handwashing and hand antisepsis in health-care settings. In addition, it provides specific recommendations to promote improved hand-hygiene practices and reduce transmission ofpathogenic microorganisms to patients and personnel in health-care settings. This report reviews studies published since the 1985 CDC guideline (Garner JS, Favero MS. CDC guideline for handwashing and hospital environmental control, 1985. Infect Control 1986;7:231-43) and the 1995 APIC guideline (Larson EL, APIC Guidelines Committee. APIC guideline for handwashing and hand antisepsis in health care settings. Am J Infect Control 1995;23:251-69) were issued and provides an in-depth review of hand-hygiene practices of HCWs, levels of adherence of personnel to recommended handwashing practices, and factors adversely affecting adherence. New studies of the in vivo efficacy of alcohol-based hand rubs and the low incidence of dermatitis associated with their use are reviewed. Recent studies demonstrating the value of multidisciplinary hand-hygiene promotion programs and the potential role of alcohol-based hand rubs in improving hand-hygiene practices are summarized. Recommendations concerning related issues (e.g., the use of surgical hand antiseptics, hand lotions or creams, and wearing of artificial fingernails) are also included.  (+info)

A third transposable element, ISPpu12, from the toluene-xylene catabolic plasmid pWW0 of Pseudomonas putida mt-2. (38/370)

A 3,372-bp insertion sequence, ISPpu12, has been identified on the archetypal toluene-xylene TOL catabolic plasmid pWW0 from Pseudomonas putida mt-2. The insertion sequence element is located on the plasmid between bases 84397 and 87768 in a region which also contains the termini and transposase genes of the catabolic transposons Tn4651 and Tn4653 (A. Greated, L. Lambertson, P. A. Williams, and C. M. Thomas, Environ. Microbiol., in press). ISPpu12 has terminal inverted repeats of 24 bp with three mismatches and contains four open reading frames, a tnpA homologue and three open reading frames (lspA, orf1, and orf2) of undetermined function. After insertion in vitro of a Km(r) cassette into ISPpu12 either in the intergenic region between orf1 and orf2 or directly into the orf1 gene and ligation into a suicide vector, the modified ISPpu12-Km transposes at high frequency, often in multiple copies, into the chromosome of a P. putida recipient. Inactivation of lspA, orf1, and orf2 by introducing a 7-bp deletion into the 5' region of each gene had no major effect upon transposition, but a similar mutation of tnpA completely eliminated transposition. Analysis of the literature and of strains derived from the chlorobenzoate-degrading Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 suggests that the promiscuity of this element has played an important role in the history of plasmid pWW0. Database comparisons and the accompanying paper (A. J. Weightman, A. W. Topping, K. E. Hill, L. L. Lee, K. Sakai, J. H. Slater, and A. W. Thomas, J. Bacteriol. 184:6581-6591, 2002) show that ISPpu12 is a transposable element also found in other bacteria.  (+info)

Exposure to carcinogenic air pollutants among policemen working close to traffic in an urban area. (39/370)

OBJECTIVE: This study evaluates individual airborne exposure to gaseous and particulate carcinogenic pollutants in a group of policemen working close to traffic in the center of Grenoble, France. METHODS: Sixty-two personal active air samples were collected during the workshifts of eight policemen in summer and in winter during the occurrence of the thermal inversion phenomenon. Seventeen stationary air samples were monitored in the policemen's work area during the same period with the same sampling devices as used for the personal samples. The respirable particle concentration was determined using the gravimetric method. The concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and aldehydes were measured with high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorimetric or ultraviolet detection. The benzene-toluene-xylene levels were determined with gas chromatography with flame ionization detection. RESULTS: The median concentration of the personal samples for respirable particles was 55.5 microg/m3 in the summer and 124 microg/m3 in the winter. The corresponding values were 0.10 and 0.28 ng/m3 for benzo(a)pyrene, 14 and 21 microg/m3 for formaldehyde, and 10.5 and 23.5 microg/m3 for benzene. The median personal concentrations were equal to or higher than the corresponding stationary levels for both seasons. Compared with the concentration of aldehydes, the concentrations of respirable particles, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and benzene-toluene-xylene appeared to show higher individual variability. CONCLUSIONS: The occupational exposure of policemen does not exceed any currently applicable occupational or medical exposure limits. Individual particulate levels should preferably be monitored in Grenoble in winter to avoid underestimations.  (+info)

Ubiquity of plasmids in coding for toluene and xylene metabolism in soil bacteria: evidence for the existence of new TOL plasmids. (40/370)

Thirteen bacteria have been isolated from nine different soil samples by selective enrichment culture on m-toluate (m-methylbenzoate) minimal medium. Eight of these were classified as Pseudomonas putida, one as a fluorescent Pseudomonas sp., and four as nonfluorescent Pseudomonas sp. All 13 strains appeared to carry TOL plasmids superficially similar to that previously described in P. putida mt-2 in that: (i) all the wild-type strains could utilize toluene, m-xylene, and p-xylene as sole carbon and energy sources, (ii) these growth substrates were metabolized through the corresponding alcohols and aldehydes to benzoate, m-toluate, and p-toluate, respectively, and thence by the divergent meta (or alpha-ketoacid) pathway, and (iii) the isolates could simultaneously and spontaneously lose their ability to utilize the hydrocarbons, alcohols, aldehydes, and acids, particularly during growth on benzoate, giving rise to cured strains which could grow only on benzaldehyde and benzoate of the aromatic substrates by the alternative ortho (or beta-ketoadipate) pathway. Eight of the isolates were able to transfer their TOL plasmids into their own cured strains, but only five were able to transfer them in interstrain conjugation into the cured strains, but only five were able to transfer them in interstrain conjugation into the cured derivative of P. putida mt-2. However, P. putida mt-2 was able to transfer its TOL plasmid into 11 of the cured isolates, and eight of these were able to retransmit this foreign plasmid in intrastrain conjugation with their own cured derivatives. Three of the isolates, MT 14, MT 15, and MT 20, differed significantly from the others in that the wild-type strains dissimilated the p-methyl-substituted substrates poorly, and also, during growth on benzoate, in addition to the cured derivatives, they gave rise to derivatives with a phenotype intermediate between the cured and wild-type strains, the biochemical and genetic nature of which has not been elucidated.  (+info)