Mette C. Schladweiler
United States Environmental Protection Agency
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Featured researches published by Mette C. Schladweiler.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2002
Mette C. Schladweiler; Allen D. Ledbetter; Russ Hauser; David C. Christiani; John K. McGee; Judy R. Richards; Daniel L. Costa
Exposure to particulate matter (PM) has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality among individuals with cardiovascular disease. It is hypothesized that systemic alterations occur concurrent to pulmonary injury/inflammation, and contribute to cardiac events in compromised hosts. We explored this hypothesis using a rat model for human hypertension and cardiovascular disease (spontaneously hypertensive, SH), and normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats. SH and WKY rats (12-13 wk old) were exposed either intratracheally (IT; 0.0, 1.0, or 5.0 mg/kg in saline) or nose-only (15 mg/m 3 2 6 h/d 2 3 d/wk 2 1, 2 or 4 wk) to combustion source residual oil fly ash (ROFA) with low metal content, and examined 1, 2 or 4 d later. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) albumin and neutrophils increased (SH WKY) at d 1 following ROFA IT. With inhalation exposure, both strains experienced progressive histological lung damage and increases in BALF albumin and neutrophils during 1 to 4 wk (SH > WKY). Acute lung injury from ROFA IT was temporally associated with increases in plasma fibrinogen in both strains, but only the SH rats responded to the acute 1-wk ROFA inhalation. Longer term (2 or 4 wk) ROFA caused progressive lung injury (SH > WKY), but did not sustain the increase in fibrinogen. BALF glutathione increased in a temporal fashion similar to fibrinogen; however, only WKY rats demonstrated this response. There was a small but consistent decrease in blood lymphocytes and an increase in blood neutrophils in SH rats exposed to ROFA acutely. In conclusion, acute PM exposure can provoke an acute systemic thrombogenic response associated with pulmonary injury/inflammation and oxidative stress in cardiovascular compromised rats. This evidence is consistent with greater cardiovascular events during acute PM episodes in compromised humans.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2010
Ronald Thomas; Allen D. Ledbetter; Mette C. Schladweiler; Jonathan H. Shannahan; J. Grace Wallenborn; Amie K. Lund; Matthew J. Campen; Elizabeth Susan O’Connor Butler; Reddy R. Gottipolu; Abraham Nyska; Judy E. Richards; Deborah Andrews; Richard H. Jaskot; John McKee; Sainath R. Kotha; Rishi B. Patel; Narasimham L. Parinandi
Background Mechanisms of cardiovascular injuries from exposure to gas and particulate air pollutants are unknown. Objective We sought to determine whether episodic exposure of rats to ozone or diesel exhaust particles (DEP) causes differential cardiovascular impairments that are exacerbated by ozone plus DEP. Methods and results Male Wistar Kyoto rats (10–12 weeks of age) were exposed to air, ozone (0.4 ppm), DEP (2.1 mg/m3), or ozone (0.38 ppm) + DEP (2.2 mg/m3) for 5 hr/day, 1 day/week for 16 weeks, or to air, ozone (0.51 or 1.0 ppm), or DEP (1.9 mg/m3) for 5 hr/day for 2 days. At the end of each exposure period, we examined pulmonary and cardiovascular biomarkers of injury. In the 16-week study, we observed mild pulmonary pathology in the ozone, DEP, and ozone + DEP exposure groups, a slight decrease in circulating lymphocytes in the ozone and DEP groups, and decreased platelets in the DEP group. After 16 weeks of exposure, mRNA biomarkers of oxidative stress (hemeoxygenase-1), thrombosis (tissue factor, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, tissue plasminogen activator, and von Willebrand factor), vasoconstriction (endothelin-1, endothelin receptors A and B, endothelial NO synthase) and proteolysis [matrix metalloprotease (MMP)-2, MMP-3, and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloprotease-2] were increased by DEP and/or ozone in the aorta, but not in the heart. Aortic LOX-1 (lectin-like oxidized low-density lipoprotein receptor-1) mRNA and protein increased after ozone exposure, and LOX-1 protein increased after exposure to ozone + DEP. RAGE (receptor for advanced glycation end products) mRNA increased in the ozone + DEP group. Exposure to ozone or DEP depleted cardiac mitochondrial phospholipid fatty acids (DEP > ozone). The combined effect of ozone and DEP exposure was less pronounced than exposure to either pollutant alone. Exposure to ozone or DEP for 2 days (acute) caused mild changes in the aorta. Conclusions In animals exposed to ozone or DEP alone for 16 weeks, we observed elevated biomarkers of vascular impairments in the aorta, with the loss of phospholipid fatty acids in myocardial mitochondria. We conclude that there is a possible role of oxidized lipids and protein through LOX-1 and/or RAGE signaling.
Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2002
Matthew J. Campen; Julianne P. Nolan; Mette C. Schladweiler; Daniel L. Costa; William P. Watkinson
Particulate matter air pollution has been associated with cardiopulmonary morbidity and mortality in many recent epidemiological studies. Previous toxicological research has demonstrated profound cardiac and thermoregulatory changes in rats following exposure to residual oil fly ash (ROFA), a combustion-derived particulate. The response to ROFA appeared biphasic, consisting of both immediate (0-6 h) and delayed (24-96 h) bradycardia and hypothermia. Other studies have demonstrated that much of the pulmonary toxicity of ROFA was caused by its constitutive transition metals, namely, Fe, Ni, and V. This study examined the contributions of these metals to the observed cardiac and thermoregulatory changes caused by ROFA in conscious, unrestrained rats. Prior to exposure, each animal was surgically implanted with a radiotelemetry device capable of continuously monitoring heart rate, electrocardiographic, and core temperature data. Individual metals were intratracheally instilled in healthy rats ( n = 4 per metal species) and in rats with monocrotaline (MCT; 60 mg/kg)-induced pulmonary hypertension ( n = 10 per metal species); combinations of metals were instilled in MCT-treated rats only ( n = 6 per combination of metal species). Metals were administered in doses equivalent to those found in the highest dose of ROFA used in previous studies, that is, 105 w g Fe 2 (SO 4 ) 3 , 263 w g NiSO 4 , and 245 w g VSO 4 . Healthy and MCT-treated rats demonstrated similar responses to metals. Fe caused little response, whereas V caused marked bradycardia, arrhythmogenesis, and hypothermia immediately following instillation and lasting ~6 h. Ni caused no immediate response, but induced a delayed bradycardia, arrhythmogenesis, and hypothermia that began ~24 h after instillation and lasted for several days. When instilled in combination, Ni appeared to exacerbate the immediate effects of V, whereas Fe attenuated them. These data suggest that the biphasic response to instilled ROFA may result from a summation of the temporally different effects of V and Ni.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2007
Mette C. Schladweiler; Peter S. Gilmour; J. Grace Wallenborn; Bhaskar S. Mandavilli; Allen D. Ledbetter; David C. Christiani; Marschall S. Runge; Edward D. Karoly; Daniel L. Costa; Shyamal D. Peddada; Richard H. Jaskot; Judy H. Richards; Ronald Thomas; Nageswara R. Madamanchi; Abraham Nyska
Background Exposure to particulate matter (PM) has been associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity; however, causative components are unknown. Zinc is a major element detected at high levels in urban air. Objective We investigated the role of PM-associated zinc in cardiac injury. Methods We repeatedly exposed 12- to 14-week-old male Wistar Kyoto rats intratracheally (1×/week for 8 or16 weeks) to a) saline (control); b) PM having no soluble zinc (Mount St. Helens ash, MSH); or c) whole-combustion PM suspension containing 14.5 μg/mg of water-soluble zinc at high dose (PM-HD) and d ) low dose (PM-LD), e) the aqueous fraction of this suspension (14.5 μg/mg of soluble zinc) (PM-L), or f ) zinc sulfate (rats exposed for 8 weeks received double the concentration of all PM components of rats exposed for 16 weeks). Results Pulmonary inflammation was apparent in all exposure groups when compared with saline (8 weeks > 16 weeks). PM with or without zinc, or with zinc alone caused small increases in focal subepicardial inflammation, degeneration, and fibrosis. Lesions were not detected in controls at 8 weeks but were noted at 16 weeks. We analyzed mitochondrial DNA damage using quantitative polymerase chain reaction and found that all groups except MSH caused varying degrees of damage relative to control. Total cardiac aconitase activity was inhibited in rats receiving soluble zinc. Expression array analysis of heart tissue revealed modest changes in mRNA for genes involved in signaling, ion channels function, oxidative stress, mitochondrial fatty acid metabolism, and cell cycle regulation in zinc but not in MSH-exposed rats. Conclusion These results suggest that water-soluble PM-associated zinc may be one of the causal components involved in PM cardiac effects.
Inhalation Toxicology | 2004
L. B. Wichers; J. P. Nolan; Darrell W. Winsett; Allen D. Ledbetter; Mette C. Schladweiler; Daniel L. Costa; William P. Watkinson
Epidemiological studies have reported statistically significant associations between the levels of ambient particulate matter (PM) and the incidence of morbidity and mortality, particularly among persons with cardiopulmonary disease. While similar effects have been demonstrated in animals, the mechanism(s) by which these effects are mediated are unresolved. To further investigate this phenomenon, the cardiovascular and thermoregulatory effects of an oil combustion-derived PM (HP-12) were examined in spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats. The particle used in this study had considerably fewer water-soluble metals than the residual oil fly ash (ROFA) particles widely used in previous animal toxicity studies, with Zn and Ni constituting the primary water-leachable elements in HP-12. Rats were surgically implanted with radiotelemeters capable of continuously monitoring electrocardiogram (ECG), heart rate (HR), systemic arterial blood pressure (BP), and core temperature (Tco). Animals were divided into four dose groups and were administered one of four doses of HP-12 suspended in saline vehicle (0.00, 0.83, 3.33, 8.33 mg/kg; control, low, mid, and high dose, respectively) via intratracheal instillation (IT). Telemetered rats were monitored continuously for up to 7 days post-IT, and were sacrificed 4 or 7 days post-IT. Exposures to mid- and high-dose HP-12 induced large decreases in HR (↓30–120 bpm), BP (↓20–30 mmHg), and Tco (↓1.2–2.6°C). The decreases in HR and BP were most pronounced at night and did not return to pre-IT values until 72 and 48 h after dosing, respectively. ECG abnormalities (rhythm disturbances, bundle branch block) were observed primarily in the high-dose group. This study demonstrates substantial dose-related deficits in cardiac function in SH rats after IT exposure to a low-metal content, combustion-derived particle.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2013
Virginia Bass; Christopher J. Gordon; Robert C. MacPhail; Wayne E. Cascio; Pamela M. Phillips; Allen D. Ledbetter; Mette C. Schladweiler; Debora L. Andrews; Diane B. Miller; D.L. Doerfler
Air pollutants have been associated with increased diabetes in humans. We hypothesized that ozone would impair glucose homeostasis by altering insulin signaling and/or endoplasmic reticular (ER) stress in young and aged rats. One, 4, 12, and 24 month old Brown Norway (BN) rats were exposed to air or ozone, 0.25 or 1.0 ppm, 6 h/day for 2 days (acute) or 2 d/week for 13 weeks (subchronic). Additionally, 4 month old rats were exposed to air or 1.0 ppm ozone, 6 h/day for 1 or 2 days (time-course). Glucose tolerance tests (GTT) were performed immediately after exposure. Serum and tissue biomarkers were analyzed 18 h after final ozone for acute and subchronic studies, and immediately after each day of exposure in the time-course study. Age-related glucose intolerance and increases in metabolic biomarkers were apparent at baseline. Acute ozone caused hyperglycemia and glucose intolerance in rats of all ages. Ozone-induced glucose intolerance was reduced in rats exposed for 13 weeks. Acute, but not subchronic ozone increased α2-macroglobulin, adiponectin and osteopontin. Time-course analysis indicated glucose intolerance at days 1 and 2 (2>1), and a recovery 18 h post ozone. Leptin increased day 1 and epinephrine at all times after ozone. Ozone tended to decrease phosphorylated insulin receptor substrate-1 in liver and adipose tissues. ER stress appeared to be the consequence of ozone induced acute metabolic impairment since transcriptional markers of ER stress increased only after 2 days of ozone. In conclusion, acute ozone exposure induces marked systemic metabolic impairments in BN rats of all ages, likely through sympathetic stimulation.
Environmental Health Perspectives | 2009
Reddy R. Gottipolu; J. Grace Wallenborn; Edward D. Karoly; Mette C. Schladweiler; Allen D. Ledbetter; Todd Krantz; William P. Linak; Abraham Nyska; Jo Anne Johnson; Ronald Thomas; Judy E. Richards; Richard H. Jaskot
Background Exposure to diesel exhaust (DE) is linked to vasoconstriction, endothelial dysfunction, and myocardial ischemia in compromised individuals. Objective We hypothesized that DE inhalation would cause greater inflammation, hematologic alterations, and cardiac molecular impairment in spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats than in healthy Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats. Methods and results Male rats (12–14 weeks of age) were exposed to air or DE from a 30-kW Deutz engine at 500 or 2,000 μg/m3, 4 hr/day, 5 days/week for 4 weeks. Neutrophilic influx was noted in the lung lavage fluid of both strains, but injury markers were minimally changed. Particle-laden macrophages were apparent histologically in DE-exposed rats. Lower baseline cardiac anti-oxidant enzyme activities were present in SH than in WKY rats; however, no DE effects were noted. Cardiac mitochondrial aconitase activity decreased after DE exposure in both strains. Electron microscopy indicated abnormalities in cardiac mitochondria of control SH but no DE effects. Gene expression profiling demonstrated alterations in 377 genes by DE in WKY but none in SH rats. The direction of DE-induced changes in WKY mimicked expression pattern of control SH rats without DE. Most genes affected by DE were down-regulated in WKY. The same genes were down-regulated in SH without DE producing a hypertensive-like expression pattern. The down-regulated genes included those that regulate compensatory response, matrix metabolism, mitochondrial function, and oxidative stress response. No up-regulation of inflammatory genes was noted. Conclusions We provide the evidence that DE inhalation produces a hypertensive-like cardiac gene expression pattern associated with mitochondrial oxidative stress in healthy rats.
Particle and Fibre Toxicology | 2008
Swapna Upadhyay; Tobias Stoeger; Volkar Harder; Ronald Thomas; Mette C. Schladweiler; Manuela Semmler-Behnke; Shinji Takenaka; Erwin Karg; Peter Reitmeir; Michael Bader; Andreas Stampfl; Holger Schulz
BackgroundExposure to particulate matter is a risk factor for cardiopulmonary disease but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. In the present study we sought to investigate the cardiopulmonary responses on spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) following inhalation of UfCPs (24 h, 172 μg·m-3), to assess whether compromised animals (SHR) exhibit a different response pattern compared to the previously studied healthy rats (WKY).MethodsCardiophysiological response in SHRs was analyzed using radiotelemetry. Blood pressure (BP) and its biomarkers plasma renin-angiotensin system were also assessed. Lung and cardiac mRNA expressions for markers of oxidative stress (hemeoxygenase-1), blood coagulation (tissue factor, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1), and endothelial function (endothelin-1, and endothelin receptors A and B) were analyzed following UfCPs exposure in SHRs. UfCPs-mediated inflammatory responses were assessed from broncho-alveolar-lavage fluid (BALF).ResultsIncreased BP and heart rate (HR) by about 5% with a lag of 1–3 days were detected in UfCPs exposed SHRs. Inflammatory markers of BALF, lung (pulmonary) and blood (systemic) were not affected. However, mRNA expression of hemeoxygenase-1, endothelin-1, endothelin receptors A and B, tissue factor, and plasminogen activator inhibitor showed a significant induction (~2.5-fold; p < 0.05) with endothelin 1 being the maximally induced factor (6-fold; p < 0.05) on the third recovery day in the lungs of UfCPs exposed SHRs; while all of these factors – except hemeoxygenase-1 – were not affected in cardiac tissues. Strikingly, the UfCPs-mediated altered BP is paralleled by the induction of renin-angiotensin system in plasma.ConclusionOur finding shows that UfCPs exposure at levels which does not induce detectable pulmonary neutrophilic inflammation, triggers distinct effects in the lung and also at the systemic level in compromised SHRs. These effects are characterized by increased activity of plasma renin-angiotensin system and circulating white blood cells together with moderate increases in the BP, HR and decreases in heart rate variability. This systemic effect is associated with pulmonary, but not cardiac, mRNA induction of biomarkers reflective of oxidative stress; activation of vasoconstriction, stimulation of blood coagulation factors, and inhibition of fibrinolysis. Thus, UfCPs may cause cardiovascular and pulmonary impairment, in the absence of detectable pulmonary inflammation, in individuals suffering from preexisting cardiovascular diseases.
Inhalation Toxicology | 2001
Mette C. Schladweiler; Judy R. Richards; Daniel L. Costa
We have recently shown that the spontaneously hypertensive (SH) rats with underlying cardiovascular disease exhibited greater pulmonary vascular leakage and oxidative stress than healthy normotensive (Wistar Kyoto, WKY) rats after a 3-day inhalation exposure to residual oil fly ash (ROFA) particles (Kodavanti et al., 2000). Since host responsiveness to a 3-day episodic ROFA inhalation could be different from a single acute exposure, we examined ROFA and its constituent metal (vanadium, V; nickel, Ni)-induced lung injury after a single intratracheal (IT) exposure. Male SH and WKY rats (12-13 wk) were IT instilled with either saline or ROFA (0.0, 0.83 or 3.33 mg/kg). The bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was analyzed for lung injury markers at 24 and 96 h post-IT. Rats were also IT instilled with 0.0 or 1.5 micromol/kg of either VSO(4) or NiSO(4).6H(2)O in saline (equivalent to a dose of 2-3 mg ROFA), and assessed at 6 and 24 h post-IT. Basal levels of BALF protein, macrophages, and neutrophils, but not lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), were higher in control SH compared to control WKY rats. Lung histology of control SH rats exhibited mild focal alveolitis and perivascular inflammation; these changes were minimal in control WKY rats. ROFA-induced increases in BALF protein, and to a lesser extent in LDH, were greater in SH compared to WKY rats. ROFA IT was associated with the increases in BALF total cells in both strains (SH > WKY). BALF neutrophils increased at 24 h and macrophages at 96 h in a dose-dependent manner (SH > WKY). The increase in BALF neutrophils was largely reversed by 96 h in both rat strains. The V-induced increases in BALF protein and LDH peaked at 6 h post-IT and returned to control by 24 h in WKY rats. In SH rats, BALF protein and LDH were not affected by V. Ni caused BALF protein to increase in both strains at 6 and 24 h; however, the control values at 24 h were high in SH rats, and were not distinguishable from exposed rats. The Ni-induced increase in LDH activity was progressive over a 24-h time period (WKY > SH). The number of macrophages decreased following V and Ni exposure at 6 h, and this decrease was reversed by 24 h in both strains. V caused BALF neutrophils to increase only in WKY rats. The Ni-induced increase in BALF neutrophils was more dramatic and progressive than that of V, but was similar in both strains. Lung histology similarly revealed more severe and persistent edema, perivascular and peribronchiolar inflammation, and hemorrhage in Ni- than in V-exposed rats. This effect of Ni appeared slightly more severe in SH than in WKY rats. In summary, the acute single IT exposure to ROFA resulted in greater pulmonary protein leakage and inflammation in SH rats than in WKY rats. The metallic constituents of ROFA produced these effects in a strain-specific manner such that, at the dose level used, V caused pulmonary injury only in WKY rats, whereas Ni was toxic to both strains.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2015
Desinia B. Miller; Edward D. Karoly; Jan C. Jones; William O. Ward; Beena Vallanat; Debora L. Andrews; Mette C. Schladweiler; Samantha J. Snow; Virginia L. Bass; Judy E. Richards; Andrew J. Ghio; Wayne E. Cascio; Allen D. Ledbetter
Air pollution has been linked to increased incidence of diabetes. Recently, we showed that ozone (O3) induces glucose intolerance, and increases serum leptin and epinephrine in Brown Norway rats. In this study, we hypothesized that O3 exposure will cause systemic changes in metabolic homeostasis and that serum metabolomic and liver transcriptomic profiling will provide mechanistic insights. In the first experiment, male Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats were exposed to filtered air (FA) or O3 at 0.25, 0.50, or 1.0ppm, 6h/day for two days to establish concentration-related effects on glucose tolerance and lung injury. In a second experiment, rats were exposed to FA or 1.0ppm O3, 6h/day for either one or two consecutive days, and systemic metabolic responses were determined immediately after or 18h post-exposure. O3 increased serum glucose and leptin on day 1. Glucose intolerance persisted through two days of exposure but reversed 18h-post second exposure. O3 increased circulating metabolites of glycolysis, long-chain free fatty acids, branched-chain amino acids and cholesterol, while 1,5-anhydroglucitol, bile acids and metabolites of TCA cycle were decreased, indicating impaired glycemic control, proteolysis and lipolysis. Liver gene expression increased for markers of glycolysis, TCA cycle and gluconeogenesis, and decreased for markers of steroid and fat biosynthesis. Genes involved in apoptosis and mitochondrial function were also impacted by O3. In conclusion, short-term O3 exposure induces global metabolic derangement involving glucose, lipid, and amino acid metabolism, typical of a stress-response. It remains to be examined if these alterations contribute to insulin resistance upon chronic exposure.