Production of oxygen radicals by the reduction of oxygen arising from the surface activity of mineral fibres.

  • 1 January 1989
    • journal article
    • No. 90,p. 100-11
Abstract
According to certain hypotheses, the production of oxygen radicals within the biological medium (the phenomenon of oxidative stress) may play an important role in fibrosis and in certain steps of carcinogenesis. The mineral fibres of various materials are capable of participating in this phenomenon, owing to the reducing nature of their surface activity, so that OH. radicals can be produced from oxygen in 3 steps. The surface activity of inorganic materials which are insoluble or only very slightly soluble is due to the presence of electron donor active sites, generally linked to Fe2+ ions found in the neighbourhood of the surface. In biological systems, these sites may emerge on the surface as a result of the partial dissolution of the particle, the action of a biological reducing agent, the phenomenon of deposition on the surfaces or cation exchange. We have explored the reducing properties of the surfaces of a certain number of mineral fibres, in aqueous buffer medium, by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurement of the adduct with the radical-trapping agent 5,5'-dimethyl-l-pyrrolidine-N-oxide (DMPO), produced from the radicals initially formed (OH. or R.). We have found certain fibres to be highly effective in producing radicals from dissolved oxygen (Canadian chrysotile, nemalite, freshly ground amphiboles) while others have little effect. The reducing activity of certain fibres may be markedly increased by prior treatment in the presence of a ferrous salt (as in the case of erionite) or by the addition of glutathione to the reaction medium (as in the case of UICC crocidolite). It is suggested that the carcinogenic activity of certain inorganic materials at the pulmonary level is the result of their surface reducing properties. These reducing properties may either be present at the time of inhalation or acquired in the biological medium. This hypothesis is not in conflict with the observation of the role of the dimensional characteristics of fibres in mesothelioma.