Hervé Nunge
Institut national de recherche et de sécurité
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Featured researches published by Hervé Nunge.
Annals of Occupational Hygiene | 2000
Michel Lafontaine; Anthony J. Kriech; P. C. De Groot; P. Bonnet; Stéphane Binet; Herbert L. Wissel; Yves Morele; Hervé Nunge; Marcel Castegnaro
During the hot application of bitumen-containing materials, e.g. in road paving or roofing, fumes are emitted that contain traces of polycyclic aromatic compounds (PACs). Although workers exposure to these fumes is low, it might lead to health problems. For studying DNA adduct formation as a consequence of inhalation of bitumen fumes we developed and validated an inhalation system (a dynamic fume generator plus a nose only inhalation chamber). This paper presents and discusses the analytical results from the different laboratories involved in this study on the fumes sampled in the inhalation chamber during three series of experiments where the animals were exposed to fumes at the 5 mg/m3 and 50 mg/m3 level, coming from bitumen heated at 200 degrees C and, as a positive control, fumes from coal tar, heated to 110 degrees C at the 5 mg/m3 level. The following parameters were controlled: temperatures at different key places in the generator; humidity of the chamber; the bitumen or coal tar flow rate; and Total Particulate Matter (TPM). Analyses were performed for Benzene Soluble Matter (BSM), the EPA polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) mixture and for a number of heteroatom-containing PACs. The data show that the coal tar fumes produced at 110 degrees C were very volatile and that most of the differences in particulate matter found between the laboratories can be attributed to evaporative losses. The bitumen fumes boil 25-50 degrees C higher and contain higher boiling compounds. A comparison is made between the PAC exposure profiles for bitumen experiments aimed at 5 and 50 mg/m3. Although the same molecules are found in both fumes their proportion is dramatically different. This effect is largest with the 2- and 3-ring PACs, the ratio of the concentrations found in the 50 mg/m3 TPM concentration to that in the 5 mg/m3 experiment gradually declines from 5500 for acenaphthene to 500 for pyrene, for the 5-ring PACs this ratio is 20-30. As function of their vapour pressure, the ratios of the concentrations of the hetero PACs follow the same trend as that of the 16 EPA PAHs and are of the same order of magnitude. In conclusion, for the compounds investigated, the equipment delivers a fume atmosphere in a reproducible manner. The 50 mg/m3 bitumen fumes are not representatives of field fumes. The reason for these quantitative differences is unclear and further work would be needed to clarify this. Nevertheless it was felt that these fumes at 50 mg/m3 might be a useful tool for qualitative detection of DNA adducts in an animal exposure study.
Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds | 2001
Carole Genevois-charmeau; Stéphane Binet; P. Bonnet; Michel Lafontaine; Anthony J. Kriech; Paul C. de groot; Herbert L. Wissel; Liliane Garren; Yves Morele; Hervé Nunge; Marcel Castegnaro
Abstract During the hot application of bitumen containing materials, e.g., in hot paving or roofing, fumes are emitted that contain traces of polycyclic aromatic compounds (PACs) including heterocyclic and/or substituted PACs. Previous studies of DNA adduct formation by bitumen and coal-tar fume condensates (BFCs and CTFCs, respectively) indicated that the genotoxic compounds responsible for DNA adduct formation in BFCs and CTFCs were of different nature. Moreover, it was suggested that the major adduct found in the lungs and also in skin and lymphocytes of BFC-treated rats might be usable as a marker of exposure to bitumen fumes.
Xenobiotica | 2013
Frédéric Cosnier; Benoît Cossec; Manuella Burgart; Hervé Nunge; Céline Brochard; Marie-Josèphe Décret; Aurélie Remy
Abstract 1. Toluene (TOL) is a neurotoxic, ototoxic and reprotoxic solvent which is metabolized via the glutathione pathway, producing benzylmercapturic, o-, m- and p-toluylmercapturic acids (MAs). These metabolites could be useful as biomarkers of TOL exposure. 2. The aims of this study were (1) to provide data on MAs excretion in rat urine following TOL exposure by inhalation, (2) to compare them to data from traditional TOL biomarkers, i.e. TOL in blood (Tol-B), and urinary hippuric acid (HA) and o-cresol (oCre) and (3) to establish a relationship between these different indicators and the airborne TOL concentration (Tol-A). 3. Sprague–Dawley rats were exposed to a range of TOL concentrations. Blood and urine were collected and analyzed to determine biomarker levels. 4. Levels of the four MAs correlate strongly with Tol-A (comparable to the correlation with Tol-B). 5. MAs are thus clearly superior to oCre and HA as potential markers of exposure to TOL.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Julie Peiffer; Frédéric Cosnier; Nathalie Grova; Hervé Nunge; Guillaume Salquèbre; Marie Josèphe Decret; B. Cossec; Guido Rychen; Brice M.R. Appenzeller; Henri Schroeder
Fluorene is one of the most abundant polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in air and may contribute to the neurobehavioral alterations induced by the environmental exposure of humans to PAHs. Since no data are available on fluorene neurotoxicity, this study was conducted in adult rats to assess the behavioral toxicity of repeated fluorene inhalation exposure. Male rats (n = 18/group) were exposed nose-only to 1.5 or 150 ppb of fluorene 6 hours/day for 14 consecutive days, whereas the control animals were exposed to non-contaminated air. At the end of the exposure, animals were tested for activity and anxiety in an open-field and in an elevated-plus maze, for short-term memory in a Y-maze, and for spatial learning in an eight-arm maze. The results showed that the locomotor activity and the learning performances of the animals were unaffected by fluorene. In parallel, the fluorene-exposed rats showed a lower level of anxiety than controls in the open-field, but not in the elevated-plus maze, which is probably due to a possible difference in the aversive feature of the two mazes. In the same animals, increasing blood and brain levels of fluorene monohydroxylated metabolites (especially the 2-OH fluorene) were detected at both concentrations (1.5 and 150 ppb), demonstrating the exposure of the animals to the pollutant and showing the ability of this compound to be metabolized and to reach the cerebral compartment. The present study highlights the possibility for a 14-day fluorene exposure to induce some specific anxiety-related behavioral disturbances, and argues in favor of the susceptibility of the adult brain when exposed to volatile fluorene.
Neurotoxicology and Teratology | 2013
Pierre Campo; Thomas Venet; Aurélie Thomas; Chantal Cour; Blandine Castel; Hervé Nunge; Frédéric Cosnier
Toluene (Tol) is an organic solvent widely used in the industry. It is also abused as an inhaled solvent, and can have deleterious effects on hearing. Recently, it was demonstrated that Tol has both anticholinergic and antiglutamatergic effects, and that it also inhibits voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels. This paper describes a study of the effects of inhaled Tol on rats anesthetized with isoflurane, pentobarbital, or a mixture of ketamine/xylazine. Hearing was tested using distortion product oto-acoustic emissions (DPOAEs) associated with a contralateral noise to evaluate contraction of the middle-ear muscles. This allowed us to assess the interactions between the effects of Tol and anesthesia on the central nervous system (CNS). Although both anesthetics and Tol are known to inhibit the middle-ear acoustic reflex, our data indicated that inhaled Tol counterbalances the effects of anesthetic in a dose-dependent manner. In other terms, Tol can increase the amplitude of the middle-ear reflex in anesthetized rats, whatever the nature of the anesthetic used. This indicates that inhaling Tol (a Ca(2+)-channel-blocking drug) modifies the potency of anesthesia, and thereby the amplitude of the middle-ear reflex.
Chemosphere | 2010
Benoît Cossec; Frédéric Cosnier; Manuella Burgart; Hervé Nunge; Stéphane Grossmann
Glutathione pathway was specifically studied in rats exposed by inhalation to a range of ethylbenzene vapours (5-2000 ppm). Urines were collected during exposure (6h) and over the 18 h following the exposure. The potential metabolites coming from either side-chain or ring oxidation were synthesized: 1-, 2-phenylethylmercapturic acids (1-, and 2-PEMA) and 2-, 3- and 4-ethylphenylmercapturic acids (2-, 3-, and 4-EPMA). Their synthesis was fully described and the molecules characterized. Urine samples were analysed using a selective HPLC-fluorescence method. Among the five metabolites, 2-PEMA was never observed in any urine sample. By contrast, 1-PEMA was discovered in its two diastereomeric forms, and it was shown that one of them was mainly present. 2-EPMA, 3-EPMA and 4-EPMA (in the ratio 1:2:6) were also found, and their combined excretion levels were similar to that of 1-PEMA. The atmospheric concentrations and urinary excretions yielded very close correlations which allow us to consider these mercapturic acids as novel ethylbenzene exposure biomarkers.
Drug and Chemical Toxicology | 2018
Frédéric Cosnier; Stéphane Grossmann; Hervé Nunge; Céline Brochard; Samuel Muller; Anne-Marie Lambert-Xolin; Sylvie Sébillaud; Benoît Rieger; Aurélie Thomas; Marie-Josèphe Décret; Manuella Burgart; Laurent Gaté; Benoît Cossec; Pierre Campo
Abstract Methylethylketone (MEK) is widely used in industry, often in combination with other compounds. Although nontoxic, it can make other chemicals harmful. This study investigates the fate of MEK in rat blood, brain and urine as well as its hepatic metabolism following inhalation over 1 month (at 20, 200 or 1400 ppm). MEK did not significantly accumulate in the organism: blood concentrations were similar after six-hour or 1-month inhalation periods, and brain concentrations only increased slightly after 1 month’s exposure. Urinary excretion, based on the major metabolites, 2,3-butanediols (± and meso forms), accounted for less than 2.4% of the amount inhaled. 2-Butanol, 3-hydroxy-2-butanone and MEK itself were only detectable in urine in the highest concentration conditions investigated, when metabolic saturation occurred. Although MEK exposure did not alter the total cytochrome P450 concentration, it induced activation of both CYP1A2 and CYP2E1 enzymes. In addition, the liver glutathione concentration (reduced and oxidized forms) decreased, as did glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity (at exposure levels over 200 ppm). These metabolic data could be useful for pharmacokinetic model development and/or verification and suggest the ability of MEK to influence the metabolism (and potentiate the toxicity) of other substances.
Toxicology Letters | 2012
Laurent Gate; Jean-Claude Micillino; Sylvie Sébillaud; Cristina Langlais; Frédéric Cosnier; Hervé Nunge; Christian Darne; Yves Guichard; Stéphane Binet
The cytogenetic alterations in leukocytes and the increased risk for leukemia, lymphoma, or all lymphohematopoietic cancer observed in workers occupationally exposed to styrene have been associated with its hepatic metabolisation into styrene-7,8-oxide, an epoxide which can induce DNA damages. However, it has been observed that styrene-7,8-oxide was also found in the atmosphere of reinforced plastic industries where large amounts of styrene are used. Since the main route of exposure to these compounds is inhalation, in order to gain new insights regarding their systemic genotoxicity, Fisher 344 male rats were exposed in full-body inhalation chambers, 6 h/day, 5 days/week for 4 weeks to styrene-7,8-oxide (25, 50, and 75 ppm) or styrene (75, 300, and 1000 ppm). Then, the induction of micronuclei in circulating reticulocytes and DNA strand breaks in leukocytes using the comet assay was studied at the end of the 3rd and 20th days of exposure. Our results showed that neither styrene nor styrene-7,8-oxide induced a significant increase of the micronucleus frequency in reticulocytes or DNA strand breaks in white blood cells. However, in the presence of the formamidopyridine DNA glycosylase, an enzyme able to recognize and excise DNA at the level of some oxidized DNA bases, a significant increase of DNA damages was observed at the end of the 3rd day of treatment in leukocytes from rats exposed to styrene but not to styrene-7,8-oxide. This experimental design helped to gather new information regarding the systemic genotoxicity of these two chemicals and may be valuable for the risk assessment associated with an occupational exposure to these molecules.
Journal of Analytical Toxicology | 2012
Frédéric Cosnier; Hervé Nunge; Benoît Cossec; Laurent Gaté
A convenient and reliable gas chromatographic method was developed for the simultaneous determination of six aromatic acid metabolites of styrene and styrene-oxide in rat urine; i.e., benzoic (BA), phenylacetic (PAA), mandelic (MA), phenylglyoxylic (PGA), hippuric (HA) and phenylaceturic (PAUA) acids. The method involves a one-pot esterification-extraction procedure, performed directly on urine without prior treatment. Analyses were performed on a RTX-1701 capillary column and the recovered isopropyl esters derivatives were detected by flame ionization detection. The analytical method was validated for selectivity, linearity, detection and quantification limits, recovery and intra-day and inter-day precisions. Calibration curves showed linearity in the range of 8-800 mg/L, except for HA and PAUA (40-800 mg/L). Limits of detection were between 0.2 (PPA) and 7.0 (PAUA) mg/L. The intra-day precisions determined at three concentrations levels were less than 5% for BA, PAA, MA and PGA and 9% for HA and PAUA, respectively. The corresponding mean inter-day precisions for these two groups were 8 and 16%, respectively. The method was successfully applied to quantitatively analyze styrene, styrene-oxide, ethylbenzene and toluene metabolites in urine samples from rats exposed by inhalation to these compounds at levels close to the occupational threshold limit values. Provided that this method can be transposed to human urine, it could have applications as part of biological monitoring for workers exposed to styrene or related compounds.
Neurotoxicology | 2016
Ludivine Wathier; Thomas Venet; Aurélie Thomas; Hervé Nunge; Elodie Bonfanti; Frédéric Cosnier; Cécile Parietti-Winkler; Pierre Campo; Pascale Tsan; Sabine Bouguet-Bonnet; Axel Gansmüller
Some volatile aromatic solvents have similar or opposite effects to anesthetics in the central nervous system. Like for anesthetics, the mechanisms of action involved are currently the subject of debate. This paper presents an in vivo study to determine whether direct binding or effects on membrane fluidity best explain how solvents counterbalance anesthesias depression of the middle-ear reflex (MER). Rats were anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine and xylazine while also exposed to solvent vapors (toluene, ethylbenzene, or one of the three xylene isomers) and the amplitude of their MER was monitored. The depth of anesthesia was standardized based on the magnitude of the contraction of the muscles involved in the MER, determined by measuring cubic distortion product oto-acoustic emissions (DPOAEs) while triggering the bilateral reflex with contralateral acoustic stimulation. The effects of the aromatic solvents were quantified based on variations in the amplitude of the DPOAEs. The amplitude of the alteration to the MER measured in anesthetized rats did not correlate with solvent lipophilocity (as indicated by logKow values). Results obtained with the three xylene isomers indicated that the positions of two methyl groups around the benzene ring played a determinant role in solvent/neuronal cell interaction. Additionally, Solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectra for brain microsomes confirmed that brain lipid fluidity was unaffected by solvent exposure, even after three days (6h/day) at an extremely high concentration (3000ppm). Therefore, aromatic solvents appear to act directly on the neuroreceptors involved in the acoustic reflex circuit, rather than on membrane fluidity. The affinity of this interaction is determined by stereospecific parameters rather than lipophilocity.