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Evaluation of an Air Quality Health Index for Predicting the Mutagenicity of Simulated Atmospheres.

Jose ZavalaJonathan D KrugSarah H WarrenQ Todd KrantzCharly KingJohn McKeeStephen H GavettMichael LewandowskiWilliam A LonnemanTadeusz E KleindienstMatthew J MeierMark HiguchiM Ian GilmourDavid M DeMarini
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2018)
No study has evaluated the mutagenicity of atmospheres with a calculated air quality health index (AQHI). Thus, we generated in a UV-light-containing reaction chamber two simulated atmospheres (SAs) with similar AQHIs but different proportions of criteria pollutants and evaluated them for mutagenicity in three Salmonella strains at the air-agar interface. We continuously injected into the chamber gasoline, nitric oxide, and ammonium sulfate, as well as either α-pinene to produce SA-PM, which had a high concentration of particulate matter (PM): 119 ppb ozone (O3), 321 ppb NO2, and 1007 μg/m3 PM2.5; or isoprene to produce SA-O3, which had a high ozone (O3) concentration: 415 ppb O3, 633 ppb NO2, and 55 μg/m3 PM2.5. Neither PM2.5 extracts, NO2, or O3 alone, nor nonphoto-oxidized mixtures were mutagenic or cytotoxic. Both photo-oxidized atmospheres were largely direct-acting base-substitution mutagens with similar mutagenic potencies in TA100 and TA104. The mutagenic potencies [(revertants/h)/(mgC/m3)] of SA-PM (4.3 ± 0.4) and SA-O3 (9.5 ± 1.3) in TA100 were significantly different ( P < 0.0001), but the mutation spectra were not ( P = 0.16), being ∼54% C → T and ∼46% C → A. Thus, the AQHI may have some predictive value for the mutagenicity of the gas phase of air.
Keyphrases
  • particulate matter
  • air pollution
  • nitric oxide
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • escherichia coli
  • mental health
  • ionic liquid
  • human health
  • water soluble
  • electron transfer
  • density functional theory