| Literature DB >> 31014371 |
Michael Riediker1, Daniele Zink2, Wolfgang Kreyling3, Günter Oberdörster4, Alison Elder4, Uschi Graham5, Iseult Lynch6, Albert Duschl7, Gaku Ichihara8, Sahoko Ichihara9, Takahiro Kobayashi10, Naomi Hisanaga11, Masakazu Umezawa8, Tsun-Jen Cheng12, Richard Handy13, Mary Gulumian14, Sally Tinkle15, Flemming Cassee16,17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Particles and fibres affect human health as a function of their properties such as chemical composition, size and shape but also depending on complex interactions in an organism that occur at various levels between particle uptake and target organ responses. While particulate pollution is one of the leading contributors to the global burden of disease, particles are also increasingly used for medical purposes. Over the past decades we have gained considerable experience in how particle properties and particle-bio interactions are linked to human health. This insight is useful for improved risk management in the case of unwanted health effects but also for developing novel medical therapies. The concepts that help us better understand particles' and fibres' risks include the fate of particles in the body; exposure, dosimetry and dose-metrics and the 5 Bs: bioavailability, biopersistence, bioprocessing, biomodification and bioclearance of (nano)particles. This includes the role of the biomolecule corona, immunity and systemic responses, non-specific effects in the lungs and other body parts, particle effects and the developing body, and the link from the natural environment to human health. The importance of these different concepts for the human health risk depends not only on the properties of the particles and fibres, but is also strongly influenced by production, use and disposal scenarios.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31014371 PMCID: PMC6480662 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-019-0302-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Fig. 1Overview on different types of NP’s translocation and clearance in the lungs. Artwork by Mark Miller, reproduced with permission from [14].
Fig. 2Panel A: Alveolar-macrophage (AM) associated percentages of inhaled NP (20 + 80 nm iridium NP, 20 nm gold + elemental-carbon NP and 20 + 70 nm titanium dioxide NP) versus instilled micron-sized particles (0.5, 3, and 10 μm polystyrene (PSL) particles) found in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) of rats 24 h after application [54]. Panel B: Percentages of inhaled NP (20 nm iridium NP from 3 - 180 days and 20 nm gold + titanium dioxide NP from 3 - 28 days after inhalation) found in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids of rats at various time points [54] versus micron-sized particles (either inhaled 3.5 μm PSL [52] or intratracheally instilled fluorescent 2 μm PSL [51]. All percentages are relative to the contemporary lung burden.
Fig. 3The ratios Ri represent the fractions of TiO22NP present in liver, spleen, kidneys and carcass (without organs) and the integral sum of all absorbed fractions determined after IT-instillation that have been absorbed through the GIT relative to the sum of gut-absorbed and ABB-translocated TiO2NP after 1, 7 and 28 days. Mean ± SEM of n=4 rats at each time point.
Objectives and design for rodent inhalation studies of different duration, modified from [84]
| Acute /Subacute | Subchronic | Chronic |
|---|---|---|
| • To obtain hazard ID and ranking (ideally compared to positive and negative controls) | • To derive NOAEL | • To determine long latency effects (cancer); life shortening; extrapulmonary target organs |
Fig. 4Estimation of chronic NOAEC from subchronic rodent study using the MPPD Model.
Fig. 5Bioprocessing of inhaled nano-SiO2 particles: (left) large agglomerates of amorphous precursor material; right) dark field STEM image showing breakdown of SiO2 NPs in alveolar macrophage (Zone 1) and formation of Zone II.
Fig. 6Conceptual understanding of the inter-relationships between the 5Bs and the working definitions of these terms as used in this section. Bioavailability indicates the amount of the applied dose that is in the right form to enter the organism, which for NPs depends on the dispersion conditions and the interplay between the medium components and the NP surface. Biopersistence provides an indication of how long the NPs remain in circulation and/or are retained by the organs to which they biodistribute (i.e. the retention half-life) as determined by their adsorbed biomolecule corona. Retention is affected by bioprocessing, which we define as the physicochemical transformation of the NPs by cells or organisms, which are often driven by the acquired biomolecules. Bioprocessing reflects the fact that NPs and their degradation products may impact on the biochemical functioning of the cell or organism, including assimilation into cellular reactions. Finally, bioclearance describes the elimination pathways by which organisms remove NPs, which are dependent upon the uptake route and the biodistribution pattern as different organs have different clearance mechanisms available, as well as the bioprocessing following localisation to the target organs.
Fig. 7Example of a modern risk governance framework including a wide range of stakeholder communities (adapted by authors from IRGC, http://www.irgc.org/risk-governance/irgc-risk-governance-framework/, accessed July 17, 2015)