Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4430435 | Science of The Total Environment | 2010 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Effects of delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) polymorphisms on the renal and neurobehavioral functions were investigated in Chinese workers from a storage battery plant exposed to inorganic lead. Blood and urine were collected from each worker to determine the ALAD genotypes, blood lead levels (PbB), urinary β2-MG and urinary NAG activity. The World Health Organization Neurobehavioral Core Test Battery (WHO-NCTB) was used. Of the 135 lead workers tested for ALAD genotype, 126 were ALAD1-1, 9 were ALAD1-2 but none were ALAD2-2. The gene frequencies of ALADl-1 and ALADl-2 were 93.33% and 6.67%, respectively. The workers with ALAD1-2 genotype had significantly higher concentrations of PbB (62.52 µg/dl vs. 41.02 µg/dl), urinary NAG (22.01 U/gCr vs. 13.49 U/gCr), urinary β2-MG (194.98 μg/gCr vs. 112.88 μg/gCr), and digit span backward (DSB) score (6.67 vs. 5.33) than those of ALAD1-1 genotype. Urinary NAG of ALAD1-2 genotype carriers was significantly higher than that of ALAD1-1 genotype under the same blood lead level (bi 0.75 vs. bi 0.29). Interaction between PbB and ALAD genotypes has a significant influence on NAG (P = 0.02) and β2-MG (P = 0.01). It is postulated that the workers with the ALAD2 allele appear to be more susceptible to the effects of lead on renal injury, whereas neurobehavioral functions in ALAD1 homozygote tend to be more vulnerable.
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Authors
Ai Gao, Xiao-ting Lu, Qiu-ying Li, Lin Tian,