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Featured researches published by Hao Quan.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2005

Pulmonary toxicity induced by intratracheal instillation of Asian yellow dust (Kosa) in mice

Takamichi Ichinose; Masataka Nishikawa; Hirohisa Takano; Nobuyuki Sera; Kaori Sadakane; Ikuko Mori; Rie Yanagisawa; Toshio Oda; Hiroshi Tamura; Kyoko Hiyoshi; Hao Quan; Shigeo Tomura; Takayuki Shibamoto

Asian yellow dust (Kosa) causes adverse respiratory health effects in humans. The objective of this study was to clarify the lung toxicity of Kosa. ICR mice (5 weeks of age) were administered intratracheally with Kosa samples-two samples from Maowusu desert and Shapotou desert, one sample consisted of Shapotou Kosa plus sulfate, and natural Asian dust (NAD) from the atmosphere of Beijing-at doses of 0.05, 0.10 or 0.20mg/mouse at four weekly intervals. The four Kosa samples tested had similar compositions of minerals and concentrations of elements. Instillation of dust particles caused bronchitis and alveolitis in treated mice. The magnitude of inflammation was much greater in NAD-treated mice than in the other particles tested. Increased neutrophils, lymphocytes or eosinophils in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids (BALF) of treated mice were dose dependent. The number of neutrophils in BALF at the 0.2mg level was parallel to the content of β-glucan in each particle. The numbers of lymphocytes and eosinophils in BALF at the 0.2mg level were parallel to the concentration of SO(4)(2-) in each particle. Pro-inflammatory mediators-such as interleukin (IL)-12, tumor necrosis factor-(TNF)-α, keratinocyte chemoattractant (KC), monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP)-l and macrophage inflammatory protein-(MIP)-lα in BALF-were greater in the treated mice. Specifically, NAD considerably increased pro-inflammatory mediators at a 0.2mg dose. The increased amounts of MlP-lα and TNF-α at 0.2mg dose corresponded to the amount of β-glucan in each particle. The amounts of MCP-l or IL-12 corresponded to the concentration of sulfate (SO(4)(2-)) at a 0.2mg dose. These results suggest that inflammatory lung injury was mediated by β-glucan or SO(4)(2-), which was adsorbed into the particles, via the expression of these pro-inflammatory mediators. The results also suggest that the variations in the magnitude of inflammation of the tested Kosa samples depend on the amounts of these toxic materials.


Water Air and Soil Pollution | 2001

The Importance of Sr Isotopic Compositions as an Indicator of Acid-Soluble Minerals in Arid Soils in China

Yoriko Yokoo; Takanori Nakano; Masataka Nishikawa; Hao Quan

Aeolian particles originating from arid areas in China, termed Kosa, are considered to be a major source of non-sea-salt Ca, a dominant base cation, in acid precipitation in northeastern Asia. We extracted evaporite minerals (halite, gypsum, and carbonate) from the surface soil collected at eight desert and loess areas in northern China with water and acetic acid. Most 87Sr/86Sr ratios of the extracted fractions fell in a restricted range (0.7115 ± 0.0015) and differed from those of bulk soils and acid-insoluble minerals (0.712–0.717). The selective dissolution of the soil carbonates in the atmosphere is consistent with two facts: (1) their 87Sr/86Sr ratios are close to the maximum 87Sr/86Sr ratios of spring precipitation in Japan, when Kosa activity is marked; and (2) their mole ratios of Mg/Ca (0.15) and Sr/Ca (0.001) are almost identical to those of precipitation in China and Japan when Kosa activity is marked. The 87Sr/86Sr, Mg/Ca, and Sr/Ca ratios in the acid-soluble components can be used as indexes of Kosa aerosols in the precipitation of the northwestern Pacific.


Atmospheric Environment | 2003

Change in size distribution and chemical composition of kosa (Asian dust) aerosol during long-range transport

Ikuko Mori; Masataka Nishikawa; Toshifumi Tanimura; Hao Quan


Geophysical Research Letters | 2003

Record heavy Asian dust in Beijing in 2002: Observations and model analysis of recent events

Nobuo Sugimoto; Itsushi Uno; Masataka Nishikawa; Atsushi Shimizu; Ichiro Matsui; Xuhui Dong; Yan Chen; Hao Quan


Chemical Geology | 2004

Mineralogical variation of Sr–Nd isotopic and elemental compositions in loess and desert sand from the central Loess Plateau in China as a provenance tracer of wet and dry deposition in the northwestern Pacific

Yoriko Yokoo; Takanori Nakano; Masataka Nishikawa; Hao Quan


Atmospheric Environment | 2002

Estimation of the concentration and chemical composition of kosa aerosols at their origin

Ikuko Mori; Masataka Nishikawa; Hao Quan; Masatoshi Morita


Journal of Environmental Chemistry | 2003

Profiling Characteristics of Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Beijing, Yinchuan and Chengdu, China

Junko Oda; Masataka Nishikawa; Yeru Huang; Hao Quan


Journal of Environmental Chemistry | 1996

Preparation of Artificial Kosa Aerosol with Two Original Desert Sands

Hao Quan; Yeru Huang; Masataka Nishikawa; Xianwan Liu; Ikuko Mori; Yasunobu Iwasaka; Qun Wei; Shijun Qiao


Geophysical Research Letters | 2003

Correction to “Record heavy Asian dust in Beijing in 2002: Observations and model analysis of recent events”

Nobuo Sugimoto; Itsushi Uno; Masataka Nishikawa; Atsushi Shimizu; Ichiro Matsui; Xuhui Dong; Yan Chen; Hao Quan


Journal of Environmental Chemistry | 1996

Non Sea Salt (Sr2+/Ca2+) in Particulate Matter : Effective Indicator for Transportation of Kosa Aerosol

Ikuko Mori; Yasunobu Iwasaka; Masataka Nishikawa; Hao Quan

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Masataka Nishikawa

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Yeru Huang

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Atsushi Shimizu

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Ichiro Matsui

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Nobuo Sugimoto

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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