| Literature DB >> 31318498 |
Miao He1, Takamichi Ichinose2, Tomohiro Ito3, Akira Toriba4, Seiichi Yoshida2, Sadakane Kaori2, Masataka Nishikawa5, Guifan Sun1, Takayuki Shibamoto6.
Abstract
The substances associated with PM2.5-induced inflammatory response were investigated using an elimination method. PM2.5 were heated at temperatures of 120, 250, and 360°C. The results demonstrated microbial substances such as LPS and b-glucan, and chemicals including BaP, 1,2-NQ, and 9,10-PQ were reduced drastically in PM2.5 heated at 120°C. On the other hand, DBA, 7,12-BAQ, and BaP-1,6-Q were not noticeably reduced. Most of these substances had disappeared in PM2.5 heated at 250°C and 360°C. Metals (eg, Fe, Cu, Cr, Ni) in PM2.5 exhibited a slight thermo-dependent increase. RAW264.7 macrophages with or without NAC were exposed to unheated PM2.5, oxidative stress-related and unrelated inflammatory responses were induced. PM2.5-induced lung inflammation in mice is caused mainly by thermo-sensitive substances (LPS, b-glucan, BaP, 1,2-NQ, 9,10-PQ, etc.). Also, a slight involvement of thermo-resistant substances (DBA, 7,12-BAQ, BaP-1,6-Q, etc.) and transition metals was observed. The thermal decomposition method could assist to evaluate the PM2.5-induded lung inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: PAHQs; PM2.5; lung inflammation; metals; thermal decomposition
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31318498 DOI: 10.1002/tox.22816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Toxicol ISSN: 1520-4081 Impact factor: 4.119