Publication | Closed Access
Reduction of Particulate Air Pollution Lowers the Risk of Heritable Mutations in Mice
321
Citations
20
References
2004
Year
Industrial Air PollutionAir Pollution FiltrationGeneticsUrban Air QualityGenetic EpidemiologyAir QualityParticulate MatterEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental HealthEnvironmental FactorsPublic HealthHeritable MutationsKnockout MouseAllergyGenetic VariationParticulate Air PollutionInhalation ToxicologyBiological PollutantEvolutionary BiologyAir PollutionMedicine
Urban and industrial air pollution can cause elevated heritable mutation rates in birds and rodents. The relative importance of airborne particulate matter versus gas-phase substances in causing these genetic effects under ambient conditions has been unclear. Here we show that high-efficiency particulate-air (HEPA) filtration of ambient air significantly reduced heritable mutation rates at repetitive DNA loci in laboratory mice housed outdoors near a major highway and two integrated steel mills. These findings implicate exposure to airborne particulate matter as a principal factor contributing to elevated mutation rates in sentinel mice and add to accumulating evidence that air pollution may pose genetic risks to humans and wildlife.
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