Generation, characterization, and toxicological assessment of reference ultrafine soot particles with different organic content for inhalation toxicological studies

Ultrafine particles (UFP) are the smallest atmospheric particulate matter linked to air pollution-related diseases. The extent to which UFP's physical and chemical properties contribute to its toxicity remains unclear. It is hypothesized that UFP act as carriers for chemicals that drive biologi...

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Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 951; p. 175727
Main Authors Das, Anusmita, Pantzke, Jana, Jeong, Seongho, Hartner, Elena, Zimmermann, Elias J., Gawlitta, Nadine, Offer, Svenja, Shukla, Deeksha, Huber, Anja, Rastak, Narges, Meščeriakovas, Arūnas, Ivleva, Natalia P., Kuhn, Evelyn, Binder, Stephanie, Gröger, Thomas, Oeder, Sebastian, Delaval, Mathilde, Czech, Hendryk, Sippula, Olli, Schnelle-Kreis, Jürgen, Di Bucchianico, Sebastiano, Sklorz, Martin, Zimmermann, Ralf
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.11.2024
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Summary:Ultrafine particles (UFP) are the smallest atmospheric particulate matter linked to air pollution-related diseases. The extent to which UFP's physical and chemical properties contribute to its toxicity remains unclear. It is hypothesized that UFP act as carriers for chemicals that drive biological responses. This study explores robust methods for generating reference UFP to understand these mechanisms and perform toxicological tests. Two types of combustion-related UFP with similar elemental carbon cores and physical properties but different organic loads were generated and characterized. Human alveolar epithelial cells were exposed to these UFP at the air-liquid interface, and several toxicological endpoints were measured. UFP were generated using a miniCAST under fuel-rich conditions and immediately diluted to minimize agglomeration. A catalytic stripper and charcoal denuder removed volatile gases and semi-volatile particles from the surface. By adjusting the temperature of the catalytic stripper, UFP with high and low organic content was produced. These reference particles exhibited fractal structures with high reproducibility and stability over a year, maintaining similar mass and number concentrations (100 μg/m3, 2.0·105 #/cm3) and a mean particle diameter of about 40 nm. High organic content UFP had significant PAH levels, with benzo[a]pyrene at 0.2 % (m/m). Toxicological evaluations revealed that both UFP types similarly affected cytotoxicity and cell viability, regardless of organic load. Higher xenobiotic metabolism was noted for PAH-rich UFP, while reactive oxidation markers increased when semi-volatiles were stripped off. Both UFP types caused DNA strand breaks, but only the high organic content UFP induced DNA oxidation. This methodology allows modification of UFP's chemical properties while maintaining comparable physical properties, linking these variations to biological responses. [Display omitted] •Two types of reference ultrafine soot particles (UFP) were produced•Ultrafine soot UFP with similar physical properties and contrasting chemical properties•The concentration of PAHs in the two types of UFP varied by orders of magnitude•Different properties induce different toxicity in vitro•Repeated UFP production and characterization proved excellent stability and repeatability
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175727