310 research outputs found
Bacterial Mutagenicity of Urban Organic Aerosol Sources in Comparison to Atmospheric Samples
The bacterial mutagenicity of a comprehensive set of urban
particulate air pollution source samples is examined using
the Salmonella typhimurium forward mutation assay.
Each of the combustion source samples examined, including
the exhaust from catalyst-equipped autos, noncatalyst
autos, heavy-duty diesel trucks, plus natural gas, distillate oil, and wood combustion sources, is mutagenic in this assay, with a response per microgram of organic carbon in these samples generally greater than that of cigarette smoke aerosol. The noncombustion source samples tested generally are not mutagenic at the levels examined. The specific mutagenicity (mutant fraction per microgram of
organic carbon) of ambient aerosol samples collected in
southern California is compared to a weighted average of
the specific mutagenicity of the primary source samples
assembled in proportion to their emission rates in the Los
Angeles area. In most cases where a comparison can be
made, the specific mutagenicity of the source composites
and the ambient samples are of similar magnitude, with
the exception that the -PMS mutagenicity of the aerosol
at Long Beach, CA, during the first half of the calendar
year 1982 and at Azusa, CA, during the April-June 1982
period is much higher than can be explained by direct
emissions from the sources studied here
Seasonal and Spatial Variation of the Bacterial Mutagenicity of Fine Organic Aerosol in Southern California
The bacterial mutagenicity of a set of 1993 urban particulate air pollution samples is examined using the Salmonella typhimurium TM677 forward mutation assay. Ambient fine particulate samples were collected for 24 hr every sixth day throughout 1993 at four urban sites, including Long Beach, central Los Angeles, Azusa, and Rubidoux, California, and at an upwind background site on San Nicolas Island. Long Beach and central Los Angeles are congested urban areas where air quality is dominated by fresh emissions from air pollution sources; Azusa and
Rubidoux are located farther downwind and receive transported air pollutants plus increased quantities of the products of atmospheric chemical reactions. Fine aerosol samples from Long Beach and Los Angeles show a pronounced seasonal variation in bacterial mutagenicity per cubic
meter of ambient air, with maximum in the winter and a minimum in the summer. The downwind smog receptor site at Rubidoux shows peak mutagenicity (with postmitochondrial supernatant but no peak without postmitochondrial supernatant) during the September-October periods when direct transport from upwind sources can be expected. At most sites the mutagenicity per microgram of organic carbon from the aerosol is not obviously higher during the
summer photochemical smog period than during the colder months. Significant spatial variation in bacterial mutagenicity is observed: mutagenicity per cubic meter of ambient air, on average, is more than an order of magnitude lower at San Nicolas Island than within the urban area. The
highest mutagenicity values per microgram of organics supplied to the assay are found at the most congested urban sites at central Los Angeles and Long Beach. The highest annual average values of mutagenicity per cubic meter of air sampled occur at central Los Angeles. These findings
stress the importance of proximity to sources of direct emissions of bacterial mutagens and imply that if important mutagen-forming atmospheric reactions occur, they likely occur in the winter and spring seasons as well as the photochemically more active summer and early fall periods
Iron Speciation in PM2.5 from Urban, Agriculture, and Mixed Environments in Colorado, USA
Atmospheric iron solubility varies depending on whether the particles are collected in rural or urban areas, with urban areas showing increased iron solubility. In this study, we investigate if the iron species present in different environments affects its ultimate solubility. Field data are presented from the Platte River Air Pollution and Photochemistry Experiment (PRAPPE), aimed at understanding the interactions between organic carbon and trace elements in atmospheric particulate matter (PM). 24-hr PM2.5 samples were collected during the summer and winter (2016–2017), at three different sites on the Eastern Colorado plains: an urban, agricultural, and a mixed site. Downtown Denver had an average total and water-soluble iron air concentration of 181.2 and 7.7 ng m−3, respectively. Platteville, the mixed site, had an average of total iron of 76.1 ng m−3, with average water-soluble iron concentration of 9.1 ng m−3. Jackson State Park (rural/agricultural) had the lowest total iron average of 31.5 ng m−3 and the lowest water-soluble iron average, 1.3 ng m−3. The iron oxidation state and chemical speciation of 97 samples across all sites and seasons was probed by X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. The most common iron phases observed were almandine (Fe₃Al₂Si₃O₁₂) (Denver 21%, Platteville 16%, Jackson 24%), magnetite (Fe3O4) (Denver 9%, Platteville 4%, Jackson 5%) and Fe (III)dextran (Denver 5%, Platteville 13%, Jackson 5%), a surrogate for Fe-organic complexes. Additionally, native iron [Fe(0)] was found in significant amounts at all sites. No correlation was observed between iron solubility and iron oxidation state or chemical speciation
Bacterial Mutagenicity of Urban Organic Aerosol Sources in Comparison to Atmospheric Samples
The bacterial mutagenicity of a comprehensive set of urban
particulate air pollution source samples is examined using
the Salmonella typhimurium forward mutation assay.
Each of the combustion source samples examined, including
the exhaust from catalyst-equipped autos, noncatalyst
autos, heavy-duty diesel trucks, plus natural gas, distillate oil, and wood combustion sources, is mutagenic in this assay, with a response per microgram of organic carbon in these samples generally greater than that of cigarette smoke aerosol. The noncombustion source samples tested generally are not mutagenic at the levels examined. The specific mutagenicity (mutant fraction per microgram of
organic carbon) of ambient aerosol samples collected in
southern California is compared to a weighted average of
the specific mutagenicity of the primary source samples
assembled in proportion to their emission rates in the Los
Angeles area. In most cases where a comparison can be
made, the specific mutagenicity of the source composites
and the ambient samples are of similar magnitude, with
the exception that the -PMS mutagenicity of the aerosol
at Long Beach, CA, during the first half of the calendar
year 1982 and at Azusa, CA, during the April-June 1982
period is much higher than can be explained by direct
emissions from the sources studied here
Integrin-Linked Kinase Is a Functional Mn2+-Dependent Protein Kinase that Regulates Glycogen Synthase Kinase-3β (GSK-3β) Phosphorylation
Integrin-linked kinase (ILK) is a highly evolutionarily conserved, multi-domain signaling protein that localizes to focal adhesions, myofilaments and centrosomes where it forms distinct multi-protein complexes to regulate cell adhesion, cell contraction, actin cytoskeletal organization and mitotic spindle assembly. Numerous studies have demonstrated that ILK can regulate the phosphorylation of various protein and peptide substrates in vitro, as well as the phosphorylation of potential substrates and various signaling pathways in cultured cell systems. Nevertheless, the ability of ILK to function as a protein kinase has been questioned because of its atypical kinase domain.Here, we have expressed full-length recombinant ILK, purified it to >94% homogeneity, and characterized its kinase activity. Recombinant ILK readily phosphorylates glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) peptide and the 20-kDa regulatory light chains of myosin (LC(20)). Phosphorylation kinetics are similar to those of other active kinases, and mutation of the ATP-binding lysine (K220 within subdomain 2) causes marked reduction in enzymatic activity. We show that ILK is a Mn-dependent kinase (the K(m) for MnATP is approximately 150-fold less than that for MgATP).Taken together, our data demonstrate that ILK is a bona fide protein kinase with enzyme kinetic properties similar to other active protein kinases
Seasonal and Spatial Variation of the Bacterial Mutagenicity of Fine Organic Aerosol in Southern California
The bacterial mutagenicity of a set of 1993 urban particulate air pollution samples is examined using the Salmonella typhimurium TM677 forward mutation assay. Ambient fine particulate samples were collected for 24 hr every sixth day throughout 1993 at four urban sites, including Long Beach, central Los Angeles, Azusa, and Rubidoux, California, and at an upwind background site on San Nicolas Island. Long Beach and central Los Angeles are congested urban areas where air quality is dominated by fresh emissions from air pollution sources; Azusa and
Rubidoux are located farther downwind and receive transported air pollutants plus increased quantities of the products of atmospheric chemical reactions. Fine aerosol samples from Long Beach and Los Angeles show a pronounced seasonal variation in bacterial mutagenicity per cubic
meter of ambient air, with maximum in the winter and a minimum in the summer. The downwind smog receptor site at Rubidoux shows peak mutagenicity (with postmitochondrial supernatant but no peak without postmitochondrial supernatant) during the September-October periods when direct transport from upwind sources can be expected. At most sites the mutagenicity per microgram of organic carbon from the aerosol is not obviously higher during the
summer photochemical smog period than during the colder months. Significant spatial variation in bacterial mutagenicity is observed: mutagenicity per cubic meter of ambient air, on average, is more than an order of magnitude lower at San Nicolas Island than within the urban area. The
highest mutagenicity values per microgram of organics supplied to the assay are found at the most congested urban sites at central Los Angeles and Long Beach. The highest annual average values of mutagenicity per cubic meter of air sampled occur at central Los Angeles. These findings
stress the importance of proximity to sources of direct emissions of bacterial mutagens and imply that if important mutagen-forming atmospheric reactions occur, they likely occur in the winter and spring seasons as well as the photochemically more active summer and early fall periods
MAQS: a personalized mobile sensing system for indoor air quality monitoring.
ABSTRACT Most people spend more than 90% of their time indoors; indoor air quality (IAQ) influences human health, safety, productivity, and comfort. This paper describes MAQS, a personalized mobile sensing system for IAQ monitoring. In contrast with existing stationary or outdoor air quality sensing systems, MAQS users carry portable, indoor location tracking sensors that provide personalized IAQ information. To improve accuracy and energy efficiency, MAQS incorporates three novel techniques: (1) an accurate temporal n-gram augmented Bayesian room localization method that requires few Wi-Fi fingerprints; (2) an air exchange rate based IAQ sensing method, which measures general IAQ using only CO 2 sensors; and (3) a zone-based proximity detection method for collaborative sensing, which saves energy and enables data sharing among users. MAQS has been deployed and evaluated via user study. Detailed evaluation results demonstrate that MAQS supports accurate personalized IAQ monitoring and quantitative analysis with high energy efficiency
Recommended from our members
The short-term association of selected components of fine particulate matter and mortality in the Denver Aerosol Sources and Health (DASH) study
Background: Associations of short-term exposure to fine particulate matter (PM2.5) with daily mortality may be due to specific PM2.5 chemical components. Daily concentrations of PM2.5 components were measured over five years in Denver to investigate whether specific PM2.5 components are associated with daily mortality.
Methods: Daily counts of total and cause-specific deaths were obtained for the 5-county Denver metropolitan region from 2003 through 2007. Daily 24-hour concentrations of PM2.5, elemental carbon (EC), organic carbon (OC), sulfate and nitrate were measured at a central residential monitoring site. Using generalized additive models, we estimated relative risks (RRs) of daily death counts for daily PM2.5 and four PM2.5 component concentrations at single and distributed lags between the current and three previous days, while controlling for longer-term time trend and meteorology.
Results: RR of total non-accidental mortality for an inter-quartile increase of 4.55 μg/m3 in PM2.5 distributed over 4 days was 1.012 (95 % confidence interval: 0.999, 1.025); RRs for EC and OC were larger (1.024 [1.005, 1.043] and 1.020 [1.000, 1.040] for 0.33 and 1.67 μg/m3 increases, respectively) than those for sulfate and nitrate. We generally did not observe associations with cardiovascular and respiratory mortality except for associations with ischemic heart disease mortality at lags 3 and 0–3 depending on the component. In addition, there were associations with cancer mortality, particularly for EC and OC, possibly reflecting advanced deaths of a frail population.
Conclusions: PM2.5 components possibly from combustion-related sources are more strongly associated with daily mortality than are secondary inorganic aerosols.</p
Recommended from our members
Photochemical Aging of Atmospheric Particulate Matter in the Aqueous Phase
This study focused on the photoaging of atmospheric particulate matter smaller than 2.5 μm (PM2.5) in the aqueous phase. PM2.5 was collected during a winter, a spring, and a summer campaign in urban and rural settings in Colorado and extracted into water. The aqueous extracts were photoirradiated using simulated sunlight, and the production rate (r•OH) and the effects of hydroxyl radicals (•OH) were measured as well as the optical properties as a function of the photoaging of the extracts. r•OH was seen to have a strong seasonality with low mean values for the winter and spring extracts (4.8 and 14 fM s–1 mgC–1 L, respectively) and a higher mean value for the summer extracts (65.4 fM s–1 mgC–1 L). For the winter extracts, •OH was seen to mostly originate from nitrate photolysis while for the summer extracts, a correlation was seen between r•OH and iron concentration. The extent of photobleaching of the extracts was correlated with r•OH, and the correlation also indicated that non-•OH processes took place. Using the •OH measurements and singlet oxygen (1O2) measurements, the half-life of a selection of compounds was modeled in the atmospheric aqueous phase to be between 1.9 and 434 h.
</p
- …