Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
582377 | Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Epidemiologic studies suggest that ozone (O3) and airborne particulate matter (PM) can interact causing acute respiratory inflammation and other respiratory diseases. Recent studies investigated the hypothesis that the effects of air pollution caused by O3 and PM are larger than the effect of these two pollutants individually. We investigated the hypothesis that ozone and traffic-related PM (PM10 and PM2.5, diesel and gasoline exhaust particles) interact synergistically to produce increasing amounts of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (HO) in a heterogeneous aqueous mixture at physiological pH. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and spin trapping were used for the measurements. Results showed that HO radicals are generated by the catalytic action of PM surface area with ozone and that EPR peak intensities are two to three times higher compared to PM samples without ozone. Incubation of the nucleoside 2â²-deoxyguanosine (dG) in aqueous mixtures of ozone and PM at pH 7.4 resulted in the hydroxylation at C(8) position of dG. The formation of 8-hydroxy-2â²-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) showed a 2-2.5-fold increase over control (PM without O3). These results suggest that PM and O3 act synergistically generating a sustained production of reactive HO radicals. Partitioning of O3 into the particle phase depends on the concentration, hygroscopicity and particle size.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
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Authors
Athanasios Valavanidis, Spyridon Loridas, Thomi Vlahogianni, Konstantinos Fiotakis,