Applicability of rat precision-cut lung slices in evaluating nanomaterial cytotoxicity,apoptosis, oxidative stress,and inflammation |
| |
Authors: | Ursula G. Sauer,Sandra Vogel,Alexandra Aumann,Annemarie Hess,Susanne N. Kolle,Lan Ma-Hock,Wendel Wohlleben,Martina Dammann,Volker Strauss,Silke Treumann,Sibylle Grö ters,Karin Wiench,Bennard van Ravenzwaay,Robert Landsiedel |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Scientific Consultancy — Animal Welfare, Neubiberg, Germany;2. Experimental Toxicology and Ecology, BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany;3. Product Stewardship Water Solutions, BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany;4. Material Physics, BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany;5. Product Safety, BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany |
| |
Abstract: | The applicability of rat precision-cut lung slices (PCLuS) in detecting nanomaterial (NM) toxicity to the respiratory tract was investigated evaluating sixteen OECD reference NMs (TiO2, ZnO, CeO2, SiO2, Ag, multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs)). Upon 24-hour test substance exposure, the PCLuS system was able to detect early events of NM toxicity: total protein, reduction in mitochondrial activity, caspase-3/-7 activation, glutathione depletion/increase, cytokine induction, and histopathological evaluation. Ion shedding NMS (ZnO and Ag) induced severe tissue destruction detected by the loss of total protein. Two anatase TiO2 NMs, CeO2 NMs, and two MWCNT caused significant (determined by trend analysis) cytotoxicity in the WST-1 assay. At non-cytotoxic concentrations, different TiO2 NMs and one MWCNT increased GSH levels, presumably a defense response to reactive oxygen species, and these substances further induced a variety of cytokines. One of the SiO2 NMs increased caspase-3/-7 activities at non-cytotoxic levels, and one rutile TiO2 only induced cytokines. Investigating these effects is, however, not sufficient to predict apical effects found in vivo. Reproducibility of test substance measurements was not fully satisfactory, especially in the GSH and cytokine assays. Effects were frequently observed in negative controls pointing to tissue slice vulnerability even though prepared and handled with utmost care. Comparisons of the effects observed in the PCLuS to in vivo effects reveal some concordances for the metal oxide NMs, but less so for the MWCNT. The highest effective dosages, however, exceeded those reported for rat short-term inhalation studies. To become applicable for NM testing, the PCLuS system requires test protocol optimization. |
| |
Keywords: | Nanomaterial (NM) Rat precision-cut lung slices (PCLuS) Cytotoxicity Oxidative stress Cytokines Histopathology |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|