Abstract

Chromium (Cr) is used in many industries and it is widely distributed in the environment. Exposure to Cr dust has been reported among workers at these industries. Beside its hazardous effects on the lungs, brain injury could be induced, as the absorption of substances through the nasal membrane has been found to provide them a direct delivery to the brain. We investigated the distribution and the effects of Cr in both brain and lung following the intranasal instillation of potassium dichromate (inPDC) in rats. Simultaneously, we used the common intraperitoneal (ipPDC) rat model of acute Cr-toxicity for comparison. Thirty male Wistar rats were randomly allocated into five groups (n = 6); each received a single dose of saline, ipPDC (15 mg/kg), or inPDC in three dose levels: 0.5, 1, or 2 mg/kg. Locomotor activity was assessed before and 24 h after PDC administration, then, the lungs and brain were collected for biochemical, histopathological, and immunohistochemical investigations. Treatment of rats with ipPDC resulted in a recognition of 36% and 31% of the injected dose of Cr in the brain and lung tissues, respectively. In inPDC-treated rats, targeting the brain by Cr was increased in a dose-dependent manner to reach 46% of the instilled dose in the group treated with the highest dose. Moreover, only this high dose of inPDC resulted in a delivery of a significant concentration of Cr, which represented 42% of the instilled dose, to the lungs. The uppermost alteration in the rats locomotor activity as well as in the brain and lung histopathological features and contents of oxidative stress biomarkers, interleukin-1β (IL-1β), phosphorylated protein kinase B (PKB), and cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) were observed in the rats treated with inPDC (2 mg/kg). The findings revealed that these toxic manifestations were directly proportional to the delivered concentration of Cr to the tissue. In conclusion, the study showed that a comparably higher concentrations of Cr and more elevated levels of oxidative stress and inflammatory markers were observed in brain and lung tissues of rats subjected to inPDC in a dose that is just 0.13 that of ipPDC dose commonly used in Cr-induced toxicity studies. Therefore, the study suggests a high risk of brain-targeting injury among individuals environmentally or occupationally exposed to Cr dust, even in low doses, and an additional risk of lung injury with higher Cr concentrations. Moreover, the study introduces inPDC (2 mg/kg)-instillation as a new experimental animal model suitable to study the acute brain and lung toxicities induced by intranasal exposure to Cr compounds.

Highlights

  • The wide environmental distribution of chromium (Cr) leads to an increased interest of its toxicity and biological effects

  • Non-significant traces of Cr residues were detected in the lung tissues following instillation of 0.5 or 1 mg/kg instillation of potassium dichromate (inPDC)

  • We used high dose of ipPDC (7.5 times the highest dose of inPDC), its delivery to the brain and lungs was markedly less. These results indicated that to study the Cr toxicity induced by the exposure to its vapor, ipPDC model is not the proper one to be used; inPDC model could simulate the actual event

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Summary

Introduction

The wide environmental distribution of chromium (Cr) leads to an increased interest of its toxicity and biological effects. CrVI is a strong oxidizer and harmful to the biological systems It is very soluble and highly mobile in the environment and presents high toxicity, mutagenic, teratogenic, and carcinogenic effects [3]. It can generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) during their reduction, and these ROS can cause injury to the cellular proteins, lipids, and DNA [4, 5]. Involvement of inflammation in the Cr-toxicity has been reported [6] The propagation of this inflammatory response is dependent upon the stimulation of signaling pathways within the cell that include many components work sequentially to control the reaction and to express cytokines [7]

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