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Research Article

EFFECT OF LEAD AND ARSENIC ON MURINE MACROPHAGE RESPONSE

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Pages 459-472 | Published online: 09 Mar 2002
 

ABSTRACT

Splenic macrophages are highly efficient in trapping and concentrating foreign substances carried in the blood and also the major sites where antibodies are synthesised and from where they are released into the circulation. Lead and Arsenic as environmental agents are considered to be high priority toxic substances largely due to their carcinogenic potentials in humans. However, these heavy metals as carcinogens remain an enigma because while they are definitely active in humans, carcinogenesis in the rodent model has never been convincingly demonstrated. Although macrophages are predominantly recruited to the site of inflammation during inflammatory distress as well as in immune response, nothing is known about the interaction of lead and arsenic with macrophages and their possible role in immunotoxicologic effect. In the present study it is reported that in vivo lead acetate treatment (10 mg/kg body wt) inhibits the cell adhesion property and alters the cell morphology in the splenic macrophages. Results show that there is a significant decrease in alkaline phosphatase release in lead treated macrophages (6.7 ± 0.88 IU/100 mL) with respect to control (14.17 ± 0.18). In vivo exposure of sodium arsenite (0.5 mg/kg body wt) also decreases phagocytic activity for ingestion and digestion of exogenous antigens, such as whole microorganism, as evident from the phagocytic index, 11555.55 ± 62.86 (in control) to 5555.5 ± 1571.33 in arsenic treated cells. Arsenic exposed cells release 8.15 ± 0.05 µM nitric oxide, whereas control cells release 10.95 ± 0.15 µM of nitric oxide, which is also identical following LPS stimulation. Results show that the functional integrity of the target cell is also decreased after arsenic exposure as obtained from the percentage of DNA fragmentation. A greater percentage of DNA fragmentation upon arsenic treatment (43.1 ± 0.05%) with respect to control (14.9 ± 0.34%) indicates that arsenic induces apoptosis. In immune cells which are rapidly proliferating and differentiating, inhibition of these heavy metal induced functions may result in similar degree of toxicity and lead to diseased state.

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