Literature DB >> 31995888

Toxicity of fine and quasi-ultrafine particles: Focus on the effects of organic extractable and non-extractable matter fractions.

Ghidaa Badran1, Frédéric Ledoux2, Anthony Verdin3, Imane Abbas4, Mohamed Roumie4, Paul Genevray5, Yann Landkocz3, Jean-Marc Lo Guidice6, Guillaume Garçon6, Dominique Courcot3.   

Abstract

To date no study has been able to clearly attribute the observed toxicological effects of atmospheric particles (PM) to a specific class of components. The toxicity of both the organic extractable matter (OEM2.5-0.3) and non-extractable matter (NEM2.5-0.3) of fine particles (PM2.5-0.3) was compared to that of PM2.5-0.3 in its entirety on normal human epithelial bronchial BEAS-2B cells in culture. The specific effect of the quasi-ultrafine fraction (PM0.3) was assessed, by comparing the responses of cells exposed to the PM2.5-0.3 and PM0.3 organic extractable matter, OEM2.5-0.3 and OEM0.3 respectively. Chemically, PAH, O-PAH, and N-PAH were respectively 43, 17, and 4 times more concentrated in PM0.3 than in PM2.5-0.3, suggesting thereby a predominant influence of anthropogenic activities and combustion sources. BEAS-2B cells exposed to PM2.5-0.3, NEM2.5-0.3, EOM2.5-0.3 and OEM0.3 lead to different profiles of expression of selected genes and proteins involved in the metabolic activation of PAH, O-PAH, and N-PAH, and in the genotoxicity pathways. Specifically, OEM0.3 was the most inducer for phase I and phase II enzymes implicated in the metabolic activation of PAH (AHR, AHRR, ARNT, CYP1A1, CYP1B1, EPHX-1, GSTA-4) thereby producing the highest DNA damage, felt by ATR and, thereafter, a cascade of protein phosphorylation (CHK1/CHK2/MDM2) closely related to the cell cycle arrest (P21 and P53 induction). This study underlined the crucial role played by the organic chemicals present in PM0.3. These results should be considered in any future study looking for the main chemical determinants responsible for the toxicity of ambient fine PM.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Fine and quasi-ultrafine particles; Genotoxicity; Metabolic activation; Organic extractable matter; Physicochemical characteristics; Toxicity

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31995888     DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125440

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemosphere        ISSN: 0045-6535            Impact factor:   7.086


  3 in total

1.  Identification by whole-exome sequencing of new single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with molar-incisor hypomineralisation among the Lebanese population.

Authors:  C Mehawej; E Chouery; R Elzein; F Abdel-Sater; N Jalkh; F Ayoub
Journal:  Eur Arch Paediatr Dent       Date:  2022-08-20

2.  Aquatic toxicity of particulate matter emitted by five electroplating processes in two marine microalgae species.

Authors:  Konstantin Pikula; Konstantin Kirichenko; Igor Vakhniuk; Olga-Ioanna Kalantzi; Aleksei Kholodov; Tatiana Orlova; Zhanna Markina; Aristidis Tsatsakis; Kirill Golokhvast
Journal:  Toxicol Rep       Date:  2021-04-16

3.  TUBE Project: Transport-Derived Ultrafines and the Brain Effects.

Authors:  Maria-Viola Martikainen; Päivi Aakko-Saksa; Lenie van den Broek; Flemming R Cassee; Roxana O Carare; Sweelin Chew; Andras Dinnyes; Rosalba Giugno; Katja M Kanninen; Tarja Malm; Ala Muala; Maiken Nedergaard; Anna Oudin; Pedro Oyola; Tobias V Pfeiffer; Topi Rönkkö; Sanna Saarikoski; Thomas Sandström; Roel P F Schins; Jan Topinka; Mo Yang; Xiaowen Zeng; Remco H S Westerink; Pasi I Jalava
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-12-28       Impact factor: 4.614

  3 in total

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