Science Inventory

SUBCHRONIC INHALATION OF ZINC SULFATE CAUSES CARDIAC CHANGES IN HEALTHY RATS

Citation:

WALLENBORN, G., P. A. EVANSKY, J. H. SHANNAHAN, M. SCHLADWEILER, B. VALLANAT, R. GOTTIPOLU, A. D. LEDBETTER, J. E. RICHARDS, A. NYSKA, AND U. P. KODAVANTI. SUBCHRONIC INHALATION OF ZINC SULFATE CAUSES CARDIAC CHANGES IN HEALTHY RATS. Presented at Society of Toxicology Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, March 16 - 20, 2008.

Impact/Purpose:

We hypothesized that subchronic inhalation of environmentally relevant levels of zinc would cause cardiac changes in healthy rats.

Description:

Zinc is a common metal in most ambient particulate matter (PM), and has been proposed to be a causative component in PM-induced adverse cardiovascular health effects. Zinc is also an essential metal and has the potential to induce many physiological and nonphysiological changes. Most toxicological studies employ high levels of zinc. We hypothesized that subchronic inhalation of environmentally relevant levels of zinc would cause cardiac changes in healthy rats. To address this question, healthy male WKY rats (12 wks age) were exposed via nose only inhalation to filtered air or 10, 30 or 100 µg/m3 of aerosolized ZnSO4, 5 h/d, 3 d/wk for 16 wks. Necropsies occurred 48 h after the last exposure to ensure effects were due to chronic exposure rather than the last exposure. No significant changes were observed in neutrophil or macrophage count, total lavageable cells, or enzyme activity levels (lactate dehydrogenase, n-acetyl β-D-glucosaminidase, γ-glutamyl transferase) in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, indicating minimal pulmonary effect. In the heart, cytosolic glutathione peroxidase activity decreased, while mitochondrial ferritin levels increased and succinate dehydrogenase activity decreased, suggesting a mitochondria-specific effect. Although no cardiac pathology was seen, cardiac gene array analysis indicated changes in genes such as ion channels and cell signaling, a pattern similar to that seen following acute pulmonary zinc exposure. These data indicate that inhalation of zinc at environmentally relevant levels may induce cardiac effects. While changes are small in healthy rats, these may be especially relevant in individuals with pre-existent cardiovascular disease. (Abstract does not represent USEPA policy. This research was supported in part by UNC/EPA CT829471.)

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ ABSTRACT)
Product Published Date:03/17/2008
Record Last Revised:05/12/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 185563