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  4. Impact of nanocomposite combustion aerosols on A549 cells and a 3D airway model
 
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2021
Journal Article
Title

Impact of nanocomposite combustion aerosols on A549 cells and a 3D airway model

Abstract
The use of nanomaterials incorporated into plastic products is increasing steadily. By using nano-scaled filling materials, thermoplastics, such as polyethylene (PE), take advantage of the unique properties of nanomaterials (NM). The life cycle of these so-called nanocomposites (NC) usually ends with energetic recovery. However, the toxicity of these aerosols, which may consist of released NM as well as combustion-generated volatile compounds, is not fully understood. Within this study, model nanocomposites consisting of a PE matrix and nano-scaled filling material (TiO2, CuO, carbon nano tubes (CNT)) were produced and subsequently incinerated using a lab-scale model burner. The combustion-generated aerosols were characterized with regard to particle release as well as compound composition. Subsequently, A549 cells and a reconstituted 3D lung cell culture model (MucilAirTM, Epithelix) were exposed for 4 h to the respective aerosols. This approach enabled the parallel application of a complete aerosol, an aerosol under conditions of enhanced particle deposition using high voltage, and a filtered aerosol resulting in the sole gaseous phase. After 20 h post-incubation, cytotoxicity, inflammatory response (IL-8), transcriptional toxicity profiling, and genotoxicity were determined. Only the exposure toward combustion aerosols originated from PE-based materials induced cytotoxicity, genotoxicity, and transcriptional alterations in both cell models. In contrast, an inflammatory response in A549 cells was more evident after exposure toward aerosols of nano-scaled filler combustion, whereas the thermal decomposition of PE-based materials revealed an impaired IL-8 secretion. MucilAirTM tissue showed a pronounced inflammatory response after exposure to either combustion aerosols, except for nanocomposite combustion. In conclusion, this study supports the present knowledge on the release of nanomaterials after incineration of nano-enabled thermoplastics. Since in the case of PE-based combustion aerosols no major differences were evident between exposure to the complete aerosol and to the gaseous phase, adverse cellular effects could be deduced to the volatile organic compounds that are generated during incomplete combustion of NC.
Author(s)
Hufnagel, Matthias
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT
May, Nadine
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT
Wall, Johanna
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT
Wingert, Nadja
Universitäts Klinikum Freiburg und Medizinische Fakultät
Garcia-Käufer, Manuel
Universitäts Klinikum Freiburg und Medizinische Fakultät
Arif, Ali Talib
Universitäts Klinikum Freiburg und Medizinische Fakultät
Hübner, Christof  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Chemische Technologie ICT  
Berger, Markus
Vitrocell Systems GmbH
Mülhopt, Sonja
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT
Baumann, Werner
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, KIT
Weis, Frederik
Palas GmbH, Karlsruhe
Krebs, Tobias
Vitrocell Systems GmbH, Waldkirch
Becker, Wolfgang  
Gminski, Richard
Stapf, Dieter
Hartwig, Andrea
Journal
Nanomaterials  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (3.76 MB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
DOI
10.24406/publica-r-268007
10.3390/nano11071685
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Chemische Technologie ICT  
Keyword(s)
  • air-liquid interface (ALI)

  • incineration

  • nano-enabled polymer (NEP)

  • nanocomposite

  • nanoparticles

  • nanotoxicology

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