Heavy metals, Cd and Pb, and carbonaceous air pollution particulate matter are hazardous neurotoxicants. Here, a capability of water-suspended smoke particulate matter preparations obtained from poplar wood (WPs) and polypropylene fibers (medical facemasks) (MPs) to influence Cd/Pb-induced neurotoxicity, and vice versa, was monitored using biological system, i.e. isolated presynaptic rat cortex nerve terminals. Combined application of Pb and WPs/MPs to nerve terminals in an acute manner revealed that smoke preparations did not change a Pb-induced increase in the extracellular levels of excitatory neurotransmitter L-[C]glutamate and inhibitory one [H]GABA, thereby demonstrating additive result and no interference of neurotoxic effects of Pb and particulate matter. Whereas, both smoke preparations decreased a Cd-induced increase in the extracellular level of L-[C]glutamate and [H]GABA in nerve terminals. In fluorimetric measurements, the metals and smoke preparations demonstrated additive effects on the membrane potential of nerve terminals causing membrane depolarisation. WPs/MPs-induced reduction of spontaneous ROS generation was mitigated by Cd and Pb. Therefore, a potential variety of multipollutant heavy metal-/airborne particulate-induced effects on key presynaptic processes was revealed. Multipollutant reciprocal neurological hazard through disturbance of the excitation-inhibition balance, membrane potential and ROS generation was evidenced. This multipollutant approach and data contribute to up-to-date environmental quality/health risk estimation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2024.114449 | DOI Listing |
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