Environmental exposures in utero and during early life may permanently change the body's structure, physiology and metabolism, and lead to diseases in adult life 1. Infants are particularly vulnerable because of their rapid growth and cell differentiation, immaturity of metabolic pathways and development of vital organ systems. The central nervous system has unprotected barriers and a broad time window of conformation, leading to a long period of vulnerability in the developmental process and to susceptibility to any environmental insult 2. Research conducted among a limited series of pollutants (including lead, mercury and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH)) shows that early-life exposure to chemicals at current environmental levels can be neurotoxic years or even decades after exposure 3.
Traffic-related air pollution, basically urban outdoor pollution, is a global public health problem 4. Cardiorespiratory effects and mechanisms have been fully investigated 5. In contrast, little is known regarding neurological effects, with only some preliminary evidence. In rats, ultrafine carbon particles have been found in the olfactory bulb and the cerebrum and cerebellum after inhalation exposure 6; this finding has been reproduced more recently with manganese particles directly translocated to the olfactory nerve from the nose to the brain 7. In one study, dogs living in a highly polluted region in Mexico City (Mexico) had an increase in brain inflammation compared with animals living in a less polluted area 8. The brain tissue of animals from Mexico City had higher levels of nuclear factor-κB activation and nitric oxide production, as well as the principal pro-inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1 and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α, compared with the animals from the nonpolluted area 9. In a study on human autopsies in Mexico City, exposure to severe air pollution has been associated with increased levels of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 and accumulation of the 42-amino-acid form of β-amyloid, a cause of neuronal dysfunction 10.
There are two small studies in children from the general population exposed to urban air. The first study related PAH in particulate form, as collected with individual pumps during two consecutive days in 181 pregnant women from New York City (NY, USA), to mental health measured at age 3 yrs in their offspring 11. The short measurement of the exposure (only 2 days), their narrow variability (only low and high levels), and the poor specificity of PAH (the principal source is smoking) resulted in preliminary research that is not very conclusive. The second study related average air pollution exposure during childhood (carbon particles at home address derived by spatial modelling) to intelligence at age 9 yrs in 202 children from Boston (MA, USA) 12. The study, however, followed only 20% of those recruited and did not measure prospectively the variations in air pollution or the time-activity patterns of the participants. The two studies adjusted for potential confounders, such as socio-economic conditions or internal doses of lead, but failed to adjust for other factors, such as noise. Overall, these two studies were the first to translate into humans the evidence suggested in animal studies, but their deficiencies in size and design call for larger and more detailed research.
THE LUNG AND THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS
Oxidative stress, changes in autonomous function and progression of atherosclerosis have been hypothesised to be mechanisms of the neurological effect of urban air pollution in humans at any age 13. Among them, inflammation secondary to oxidative stress appears to be the major suspected culprit for delay in conformation and maturation during developmental steps. Even though most of the available research about the inflammatory effects of air pollution refers to the lungs, there is evidence that the oxidative stress and inflammation induced by particles translates systemically beyond the lungs 14. For example, we found in an international longitudinal study of 1,003 adult subjects that particle count increased markers of systemic inflammation (IL-6 and fibrinogen peripheral levels) 15.
The major underlying hypothesis is that chronic respiratory tract inflammation may lead to brain inflammation by altering levels of circulating cytokines, such as TNF-α and IL-1. These cytokines have the ability to upregulate COX-2, a potent active mediator of inflammation, in capillary brain endothelium 16. Changes in brain cytokine and chemokine expression in mice have been directly linked to intranasal exposure to ultrafine carbon 17. Carbon particles themselves generally adsorb transition metals (including antimony, barium, copper, iron and zinc) emitted from traffic exhaust and also from tyres and brake wear. These metals, which are mainly generated by traffic in the current urban atmospheres 18, have been shown to induce oxidative stress in the lung 16.
An alternative hypothetical mechanism of the neurological effect of air pollution is based on the observation that ultrafine particles containing metals translocate directly to the brain, without entering the lung 7. Changes in cognitive function in children have been shown to be associated with relatively low internal doses of lead 19 and mercury 3. In addition to being linked to cognitive deficits in children, lead has been related to a diversity of behavioural problems (reading problems, school failure and delinquent behaviour), with a high social impact 20. In experimental studies, some metals, such as mercury and lead, inhibit neuronal differentiation, myelinisation and synaptogenesis 21, but the specific mechanisms for lead-induced intellectual deficits have not been fully elucidated.
THE CONSTELLATION OF FACTORS IN BRAIN MATURATION
A well-known constellation of factors related to neurodevelopment could all play a confounding role or they could explain differences in vulnerability of the dose–response relationship between air pollution and neurodevelopment 20. These factors must be considered and include, for example, the social environment (including parental psychological status), breastfeeding, diet, maternal smoking, birthweight and noise 22; along with other pollutants such as lead, mercury, DDT and indoor air pollutants (those originating from indoor sources, such as heating and cooking, or from microbial contaminants, such as endotoxins). Endotoxins are the common structural component of Gram-negative bacteria in indoor air that induced chronic inflammation in the rat brain 23.
Therefore, it is important to examine diet, since it is a major source of antioxidants. Antioxidant defence mechanisms could be increased by dietary means (vitamins, omega-3 (docosahexaenoic acid) and omega-6 (arachidonic acid) fatty acids, and other micronutrients (zinc and folic acid)) to protect against air pollutants 24. Antioxidants in the lung are the first line of defence against oxygen free radicals. All of these antioxidants are free radical scavengers and they react rapidly to limit interaction with lung fluid lipids and proteins 25. The brain is particularly susceptible to free radical-mediated insult, due to its inherent biochemical and physiological characteristics, including high lipid content and energy requirements 26. Reactive oxygen species are generated continuously in the nervous system during normal metabolism and neuronal activity 27. Similarly, genetic background may result in a differential susceptibility toward the oxidative stress pathway 28. For example, antioxidant supplementation with vitamins C and E appears to modulate the effect of ozone in asthmatic children homozygous for the GSTM1 null allele 29. Inflammatory cytokines released in the periphery (e.g. respiratory epithelia) upregulate the innate immune Toll-like receptor 2. Such activation and the subsequent events leading to neurodegeneration have recently been observed in lung lavage in mice exposed to ambient Los Angeles (CA, USA) particulate matter 30.
CONCLUSION
The study of chronic effects of urban air pollution should incorporate subtle health effects, such as functional delays in brain maturation and impairment of neurobehavioural competences, from early life exposures. The long-term consequences of these effects in the co-causation of neurodegenerative diseases have so far only been speculated, but it is time for multidisciplinary research in human populations (including neurobehavioural and lung examination, and assessments of individual exposure to air pollutants and antioxidants, and of the genetic contribution) to further investigate the suspicion that our urban air is neurotoxic for our children.
Support statement
J. Sunyer has received funds for research from the European Union, the government of Spain and Catalonia, and La Caixa Fundation.
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