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Exposure to urban nanoparticles at low PM$$_1$$ concentrations as a source of oxidative stress and inflammation

Scientific Reports 2023 26 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Francesca Costabile, Maurizio Gualtieri, Matteo Rinaldi, Maurizio Gualtieri, Silvia Canepari, Maurizio Gualtieri, R. Vecchi, Lorenzo Massimi, R. Vecchi, Silvia Canepari, Gianluca Di Iulio, Gianluca Di Iulio, Marco Paglione, Emanuela Corsini Luca Di Liberto, Emanuela Corsini M. C. Facchini, Stefano Decesari, Emanuela Corsini

Summary

Researchers exposed human lung cells to real urban air at very low pollution concentrations and found that even small amounts of nanoparticles — especially those containing copper — triggered oxidative stress and inflammation, suggesting current air quality standards may underestimate the danger of nanoparticle-rich city air.

Exposures to fine particulate matter (PM[Formula: see text]) have been associated with health impacts, but the understanding of the PM[Formula: see text] concentration-response (PM[Formula: see text]-CR) relationships, especially at low PM[Formula: see text], remains incomplete. Here, we present novel data using a methodology to mimic lung exposure to ambient air (2[Formula: see text] 60 [Formula: see text]g m[Formula: see text]), with minimized sampling artifacts for nanoparticles. A reference model (Air Liquid Interface cultures of human bronchial epithelial cells, BEAS-2B) was used for aerosol exposure. Non-linearities observed in PM[Formula: see text]-CR curves are interpreted as a result of the interplay between the aerosol total oxidative potential (OP[Formula: see text]) and its distribution across particle size (d[Formula: see text]). A d[Formula: see text]-dependent condensation sink (CS) is assessed together with the distribution with d[Formula: see text] of reactive species . Urban ambient aerosol high in OP[Formula: see text], as indicated by the DTT assay, with (possibly copper-containing) nanoparticles, shows higher pro-inflammatory and oxidative responses, this occurring at lower PM[Formula: see text] concentrations (< 5 [Formula: see text]g m[Formula: see text]). Among the implications of this work, there are recommendations for global efforts to go toward the refinement of actual air quality standards with metrics considering the distribution of OP[Formula: see text] with d[Formula: see text] also at relatively low PM[Formula: see text].

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