Aging and sensitivity to traffic-generated air pollutants in male and female mice
University Of Southern California, Los Angeles CA
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Abstract
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Air pollutants derived from fossil fuels are recognized for accelerating arterial and pulmonary diseases. Moreover, brain dysfunctions during development and aging have been associated with air pollutants by postmortem findings on young humans (Block & Calderon-Garciduenas 2009) and by epidemiologic studies of the middle-aged (Chen & Schwartz 2009). Correspondingly, young rodents show glial inflammatory changes with defined exposure to traffic-generated nano-sized PM (nPM) (Zanchi et al 2010; Kleinman et al 2008). Our pilot data show effects of nPM on neuronal glutamatergic receptors in vivo and in vitro. We propose to analyze age and gender interactions in neurodegenerative effects of nPM in young adult and middle-aged C57BL/6 mice, using re-aerosolized nPM from urban Los Angeles. Aim 1 will expose animals to re-aerosolized nPM for 20 weeks, with assessment of memory, and neuronal and glial functions. Aim 2 will evaluate in vitro glial age effects on neuronal activities in response to aqueous suspensions of nPM.
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