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2006
Ozone (O(3)) is an important component of air pollution and a potent oxidant of biomolecules. To address the hypothesis that elevated ambient O(3) can induce cytogenetic damage in healthy people, we collected buccal cells from two groups of students (N = 126) from University of California, Berkeley, in the spring and again in the fall. One group spent their summer in the Los Angeles (LA) area where summer O(3) concentrations are significantly higher than in the San Francisco Bay (SF) area, and another remained in SF. During the school year, all students were exposed to low O(3) levels in SF. The micronucleus assay in a total of 611,000 buccal cells demonstrated that, in the fall, micronuclei (MN) in normal cells for the LA group had increased 39% relative to levels in the spring (1.52 and 0.87 MN/1,000 cells, respectively, P = 0.001). Students who spent the summer in SF had a 12.7% increase (P = 0.48). A similar effect of season was seen in degenerated buccal cells for the LA group (3.23 versus 1.88 MN/1,000 cells, P = 0.003). LA but not SF subjects also had more degenerated cells in the fall sample (P = 0.003). These findings were paralleled by an increase in MN and nucleoplasmic bridges in lymphocytes and MN in buccal cells in a sub-group of 15 students who underwent a 4-h controlled exposure to 200 p.p.b. O(3). This cytogenetic evidence, along with recent studies linking O(3) exposure to elevated lung cancer risk and mortality, suggest potential public health implications from exposures to high oxidant environments.
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GspB and Hsa are homologous surface glycoproteins of Streptococcus gordonii that bind sialic acid moieties on platelet membrane glycoprotein Ibalpha. Since this species is an important member of the oral flora, we examined the direct binding of these adhesins to human salivary proteins. Both GspB and Hsa bound low-molecular-weight salivary mucin MG2 and salivary agglutinin. Hsa also bound several other salivary proteins, including secretory immunoglobulin A. Screening of six oral streptococcal isolates revealed that at least two of the strains expressed GspB homologues. These results indicate that GspB-like adhesins may be important for oral bacterial colonization.
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