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Particulate Air Pollution Exposure and Expression of Viral and Human MicroRNAs in Blood: The Beijing Truck Driver Air Pollution Study.

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-08-02, 00:00 authored by L Hou, J Barupal, W Zhang, Y Zheng, L Liu, X Zhang, C Dou, JP McCracken, A Díaz, V Motta, M Sanchez-Guerra, KR Wolf, PA Bertazzi, JD Schwartz, S Wang, AA Baccarelli
BACKGROUND: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are post-transcriptional gene suppressors and potential mediators of environmental effects. In addition to human miRNAs, viral miRNAs expressed from latent viral sequences are detectable in human cells. OBJECTIVE: In a highly exposed population in Beijing, China, we evaluated the associations of particulate air pollution exposure on blood miRNA profiles. METHODS: The Beijing Truck Driver Air Pollution Study (BTDAS) included 60 truck drivers and 60 office workers. We investigated associations of short-term air pollution exposure, using measures of personal PM2.5 (particulate matter ≤ 2.5 μm) and elemental carbon (EC), and ambient PM10 (≤ 10 μm), with blood NanoString nCounter miRNA profiles at two exams separated by 1-2 weeks. RESULTS: No miRNA was significantly associated with personal PM2.5 at a false discovery rate (FDR) of 20%. Short-term ambient PM10 was associated with the expression of 12 miRNAs in office workers only (FDR < 20%). Short-term EC was associated with differential expression of 46 human and 7 viral miRNAs, the latter including 3 and 4 viral miRNAs in office workers and truck drivers, respectively. EC-associated miRNAs differed between office workers and truck drivers with significant effect modification by occupational group. Functional interaction network analysis suggested enriched cellular proliferation/differentiation pathways in truck drivers and proinflammation pathways in office workers. CONCLUSIONS: Short-term EC exposure was associated with the expression of human and viral miRNAs that may influence immune responses and other biological pathways. Associations between EC exposure and viral miRNA expression suggest that latent viral miRNAs are potential mediators of air pollution-associated health effects. PM2.5/PM10 exposures showed no consistent relationships with miRNA expression.

Funding

This work was funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/National Institutes of Health (R21 ES020010 and R21 ES020984-01) and by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (RD 83479801).

History

Publisher Statement

This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. All rights reserved. It is reproduced with permission from Environmental Health Perspectives'.

Publisher

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Language

  • en_US

issn

0091-6765

Issue date

2016-03-01

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