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Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences Center, College of Pharmacy, Community Environmental Health Program Navajo Nation Human Research Review Board Conference Window Rock, AZ November 16, 2011
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Page 1: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Immune System Responses Related to Environmental

Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results

E. Erdei & J. LewisUniversity of New Mexico, Health Sciences Center,

College of Pharmacy, Community Environmental Health Program

Navajo Nation Human Research Review Board Conference

Window Rock, AZ

November 16, 2011

Page 2: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.
Page 3: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Environmental Legacy Exposures Increase the Likelihood of Several Diseases: Autoimmune

DiseaseFigures below show similar increases in risks for autoimmune disease (self-reported) based on an increase from 1 to 2 activities

Page 4: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

DiNEH Survey Responses

35.9%

25.1%

17.1%

6.2% 5.4% 5.1%3.5% 3.1% 3.1% 2.5%

45.4%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

Prevalence of Self-Reported Health Conditions Among 1,304 DiNEH Survey Participants

(*Cancer prevalence based on 1,011 participants surveyed)

Page 5: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Goal of this portion of the study

• Direct response to community members’ requests for research on immune system function during the capacity building and environmental risk evaluation work

• Address possible pathways within the human body in association with environmental uranium and other heavy metal exposures

• Find early indicators of

health effects

Page 6: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

DiNEH biological sample collection

• DiNEH project participants from 20 chapters

• Samples collected from 267 individuals

• A subset has been analyzed for immune biomarkers (N=65)

• Early markers, showing alterations

in immune cell distribution and activity

Page 7: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Flow cytometry measurements

• Lymphocyte subpopulations from whole blood samples.

• Becton Dickinson Simultest IMK Plus lymphocyte kit was used.

• 6 cell populations were measured:– T cells (CD3+), T helpers (CD4+), T suppressors

(CD8+); – B cells (CD19+); – HLA-DR+ cell activation in T cells and– B cells and other cell types; NK cells

(CD3-/CD16+/CD56+).

Page 9: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Flow cytometry results I.CD3+ T cells (in %) among DiNEH participants

y = 25.601x + 44.298

R2 = 0.0446

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9

Exposure score

Perc

en

tag

e o

f cell

s

CD19+ B cells (in %) among DiNEH participants

y = 16.366x + 0.8651

R2 = 0.1538

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9

Exposure Score

Per

cen

tag

e o

f ce

lls

Page 10: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Flow cytometry results II.

• Increased percentage of activated T cells

• Decreased percentage of activated B cells

• Decoupling of T cell and B cell activities suggest altered immune response among this subset of participants

• Can lead to lower production of protective antibodies

• Preliminary interpretation of data; more complex modeling incorporating other variables pending

Page 11: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Serum cytokines

• Cytokines are small molecular weight proteins produced by immune cells and other cells through the human body

• Their role is to promote communication, activation processes in the immune system

• Cytokine productions show immune status and disease developmental pathways

Page 12: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Serum cytokine measurements

• Applied xMAP multiplexing technology

• UNM HSC Core Facility- Luminex 100™ detection (96-well format)

• Detection of 10 human serum cytokines (IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, INF-γ, TNF-α, and

GM-CSF) high sensitivity assay

• Uses only 50 μl of serum sample/ participant

Page 13: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Serum cytokine concentrations related to environmental uranium waste exposures

IFN-g cytokine and Exposure Score among DiNEH project participants

y = 0.0832x + 0.0385

R2 = 0.0265

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.45

0.5

0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70

Exp. score

IFN

-g [

pg

/ml)

IL-4 (hypereactivity) cytokine production and Exposure Score among DiNEH participants

y = 0.2936x + 0.1276

R2 = 0.1202

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70

Exp. score

IL-4

cc.

[pg

/ml]

Interleukin-8 (IL-8; mucosal protection) cytokine and Exposure Score among DiNEH project participants

y = 3.8629x + 2.2598

R2 = 0.00660

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

0.00 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60 0.70

Exp. Score

cyto

kin

e cc

. [p

g/m

l]

Page 14: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Serum cytokine concentrations (pg/ml) related to environmental uranium

waste exposures (N=47)• Percent of variance by exposure for IL-4 and IL-1ß suggests a

potential inflammatory process

Page 15: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

ConclusionsBased on our preliminary analysis• DiNEH participants with increased exposure to

uranium waste had increased number of activated T cells and decreased activity of B cells and other antigen-producing cells

• If consistent w/ other modeling results (e.g. water source) – indication of the decoupling of the immune response

• Alterations in cytokine production indicative of the presence of an inflammatory response

Page 16: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Future directions

• These results are based on our preliminary analyses – work in progress

• To continue to complete immune assays for entire sample set

• Further modeling works will allow us more detailed evaluation of suggestive inflammatory response

• In connection with other pathway analyses –cardiovascular process

Page 17: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

DiNEH Acknowledgements

• NIEHS, EPA and UNM for financial support• Community Advisory Board

– Ed Carlisle, Jay DeGroat, Herbert Enrico, Thomas Manning,Sr., Lynnea Smith, Jean Whitehorse,

• UNM-HSC Community Environmental Health Program & Clinical and Translational Science Center

– Johnnye L. Lewis, PhD; Miranda Cajero, BCH; Matthew Campen, PhD; Jeremy DeGroat; Mallery Downs, RN; Eszter Erdei, PhD; Molly Harmon; Gabriel Huerta, PhD; Curtis Miller; Bernadette Pacheco; Glenn Stark; Mary Woodruff; research nursing support

• Crownpoint Service Unit, I H S– Virgil Davis

• Navajo Area IHS– Lisa Allee, CNM; John Hubbard; Ryan

Johnson, MD; Doug Peter, MD• UT-Houston Nephrology

– Donald Molony, MD• Southwest Research Information Center

– Chris Shuey, MPH, Sarah Henio-Adeky, Teddy Nez, Sandy Ramone

• Students– Jamie deLemos, PhD – Tufts Univ.– Christine George – Stanford Univ.– Tommy Rock, MA, UNM Health Policy

Student– Christine Samuel-Nakamura, PhD

Candidate, UCLA• Dartmouth

– Ben Bostick, PhD• University of Arizona Cancer Center &

Northern Arizona University, NACRP– Jani Ingram, PhD, Margaret Briehl, PhD

• USEPA Region IX– Harry Allen, Rich Bauer, Clancy Tenley

• State of New Mexico Diagnostic Laboratory• Navajo Nation EPA Air Quality Division, Public

Water Supply Supervision Program, Superfund Program

• Navajo Nation Division of Health• Former Contributors:

– Bess Seschillie, Bernice Norton, Jerry Elwood, Harrison Gorman, Harris Arthur (in memoriam), Alta McCabe, Margaret Menache, PhD, Alexis Kaminsky, PhD; Eastern Navajo Health Board

• Thanks to the many others who’ve contributed

Page 18: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Project funding support

• DiNEH project – supported through the following grants

• NIEHS, RO1 ES014565; R25  ES013208; P30 ES-012072;

• USEPA/ERRG pass through contract; with support from DHHS/NIH/NCRR #1UL1RR031977-01 

Page 19: Immune System Responses Related to Environmental Uranium Exposure – DiNEH Project Results E. Erdei & J. Lewis University of New Mexico, Health Sciences.

Questions?

THANK YOU!


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