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Cultivation and aerosolization of Stachybotrys chartarum for modeling pulmonary inhalation exposure.

Authors :
Lemons AR
Croston TL
Goldsmith WT
Barnes MA
Jaderson MA
Park JH
McKinney W
Beezhold DH
Green BJ
Source :
Inhalation toxicology [Inhal Toxicol] 2019 Nov - Dec; Vol. 31 (13-14), pp. 446-456. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Dec 24.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objective: Stachybotrys chartarum is a hydrophilic fungal species commonly found as a contaminant in water-damaged building materials. Although several studies have suggested that S. chartarum exposure elicits a variety of adverse health effects, the ability to characterize the pulmonary immune responses to exposure is limited by delivery methods that do not replicate environmental exposure. This study aimed to develop a method of S. chartarum aerosolization to better model inhalation exposures. Materials and methods: An acoustical generator system (AGS) was previously developed and utilized to aerosolize and deliver fungal spores to mice housed in a multi-animal nose-only exposure chamber. In this study, methods for cultivating, heat-inactivating, and aerosolizing two macrocyclic trichothecene-producing strains of S. chartartum using the AGS are described. Results and discussion: In addition to conidia, acoustical generation of one strain of S. chartarum resulted in the aerosolization of fungal fragments (<2 µm aerodynamic diameter) derived from conidia, phialides, and hyphae that initially comprised 50% of the total fungal particle count but was reduced to less than 10% over the duration of aerosolization. Acoustical generation of heat-inactivated S. chartarum did not result in a similar level of fragmentation. Delivery of dry, unextracted S. chartarum using these aerosolization methods resulted in pulmonary inflammation and immune cell infiltration in mice inhaling viable, but not heat-inactivated S. chartarum . Conclusions: These methods of S. chartarum growth and aerosolization allow for the delivery of fungal bioaerosols to rodents that may better simulate natural exposure within water-damaged indoor environments.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1091-7691
Volume :
31
Issue :
13-14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Inhalation toxicology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31874574
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/08958378.2019.1705939