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Original Articles

Brevetoxin Inhalation Alters the Pulmonary Response to Influenza A in the Male F344 Rat

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Pages 313-324 | Received 09 Feb 2010, Accepted 14 Apr 2010, Published online: 13 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

Epidemiological studies demonstrated that the number of emergency-room visits for respiratory indications increases during periods of Florida Red Tides. The purpose of this study was to examine whether or not repeated brevetoxin inhalation, as may occur during a Florida Red Tide, affects pulmonary responses to influenza A. Male F344 rats were divided into four groups: (1) sham aerosol/no influenza; (2) sham aerosol/influenza; (3) brevetoxin/no influenza; and (4) brevetoxin/influenza. Animals were exposed by nose-only inhalation to vehicle or 50 μg brevetoxin-3/m3, 2 h/d for 12 d. On d 6 of aerosol exposure, groups 2 and 4 were administered 10,000 plaque-forming units of influenza A, strain HKX-31 (H3N2), by intratracheal instillation. Subgroups were euthanized at 2, 4, and 7 d post influenza treatment. Lungs were evaluated for viral load, cytokine content, and histopathologic changes. Influenza virus was cleared from the lungs over the 7-d period; however, there was significantly more virus remaining in the group 4 lungs compared to group 2. Influenza virus significantly increased interleukins-1α and -6 and monocyte chemotactic protein-1 in lung; brevetoxin exposure significantly enhanced the influenza-induced response. At 7 d, the severity of perivascular and peribronchiolar inflammatory cell infiltrates was greatest in group 4. Bronchiolitis persisted, with low incidence and severity, only in group 4 at d 7. These results suggest that repeated inhalation exposure to brevetoxin may delay virus particle clearance and recovery from influenza A infection in the rat lung.

Acknowledgments

Research conducted under NIEHS P01 ES10594. The authors are grateful for the technical and administrative assistance of the LRRI and Center for Marine Sciences staff that made this study possible. Special thanks go to Glenna Chavez, Susan Core, Dolores Esparza, Fred Kleinschnitz, and Chris Ynostroza for technical support, Drs. JeanClare Seagrave and Frederick Koster for helpful discussions, and Drs. Laura Fleming and William Abraham for careful article review.

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