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© 1989 Oxford University Press

research-article

Toxicology Studies of a Chemical Mixture of 25 Groundwater Contaminants

II. Immunosuppression in B6C3F1 Mice1

DORI R. GERMOLEC, RAYMOND S. H. YANG, MICHAEL F. ACKERMANN, GARY J. ROSENTHAL, GARY A. BOORMAN, PATRICIA BLAIR and MICHAEL I. LUSTER2

National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences, National Toxicology Program, P.O Box 12233, Research Triangle Park North Carolina 27709

Received September 23, 1988; accepted April 17, 1989

Concern over the potential adverse health effects of chemically contaminated groundwater has existed for many years. In general, these studies have focused on retrospective epidemiological studies for cancer risk. In the present studies, immune function was monitored in female B6C3F1 mice exposed to a chemical mixture in drinking water for either 14 or 90 days. The mixture consisted of 25 common groundwater contaminants frequently found near toxic waste dumps, as determined by EPA surveys. None of the animals developed overt signs of toxicity such as body or liver weight changes. Mice exposed to the highest dose of this mixture for 14 or 90 days showed immune function changes which could be related to rapidly proliferating cells, including suppression of hematopoietic stem cells and of antigen-induced antibody-forming cells. Some of these responses, e.g., granulocyte-macrophage colony formation, were also suppressed at lower concentrations of the chemical mixture. There were no effects on T cell function or T and B cell numbers in any of the treatment groups. Altered resistance to challenge with an infectious agent also occurred in mice given the highest concentration, which correlated with the immune function changes. Paired-water studies indicated that the immune effects were related to chemical exposure and not to decreased water intake. These results suggest that longterm exposure to contaminated groundwater may represent a risk to the immune system in humans.


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