Abstract The potential health effects posed by inhaled micro/nanoplastics (MNPs) is an area of increasing concern. There is therefore a requirement to assess environmentally relevant MNP samples using methods that accurately mirror real human exposures, whilst considering potential concomitant effects of the ambient air pollution mixture. Here, an in vitro alveolar model at the air-liquid interface, comprising anatomically appropriate densities of type I pneumocytes (hAELVi), type II pneumocytes (NCI-H441) and macrophages (differentiated THP-1), was exposed to MNPs using an aerosol exposure system (VITROCELL® Cloud12). Polyamide (PA), polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or polystyrene (PS) were deposited onto cultures by nebulising 200 μL MNP suspension (1 mg/mL) three times, followed by sequential urban dust (SRM 1649b) or indoor dust (SRM 2583) (780 ng/cm2) (NIST) exposure. Twenty-four hours post-exposure, there were no significant changes to cell viability (Erythrosin B assay) or barrier integrity (blue dextran assay). As single pollutants, PET and PS, but not PA non-significantly increased IL-6 and IL-8 release (ELISA). Co-exposure of all MNPs with SRM 1649b or SRM 2583 increased IL-6 and IL-8 release compared to respective single pollutant exposures, however significance was only reached for IL-8 release when PS was co-exposed with either SRM 1649b or SRM 2583 (P 0.05). It is shown here that MNPs may be able to act synergistically with other ambient air pollution samples to induce pulmonary inflammation whereas a single pollutant does not induce this effect, further emphasising the requirements to consider the toxicological profile of realistic air pollutant mixtures on human health.
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Joshua Bateman
Eric Auyang
Kirsty Meldrum
Annals of Work Exposures and Health
Imperial College London
Swansea University
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Bateman et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fa8ef304f884e66b5314ca — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/annweh/wxag024.034