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Photoaging of polystyrene microspheres causes oxidative alterations to surface physicochemistry and enhances airway epithelial toxicity.

Authors :
Hayek, Eliane El
Castillo, Eliseo
In, Julie G
Garcia, Marcus
Cerrato, Jose
Brearley, Adrian
Gonzalez-Estrella, Jorge
Herbert, Guy
Bleske, Barry
Benavidez, Angelica
Hsiao, Hsuan
Yin, Lei
Campen, Matthew J
Yu, Xiaozhong
Source :
Toxicological Sciences. May2023, Vol. 193 Issue 1, p90-102. 13p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Microplastics represent an emerging environmental contaminant, with large gaps in our understanding of human health impacts. Furthermore, environmental factors may modify the plastic chemistry, further altering the toxic potency. Ultraviolet (UV) light is one such unavoidable factor for airborne microplastic particulates and a known modifier of polystyrene surface chemistry. As an experimental model, we aged commercially available polystyrene microspheres for 5 weeks with UV radiation, then compared the cellular responses in A549 lung cells with both pristine and irradiated particulates. Photoaging altered the surface morphology of irradiated microspheres and increased the intensities of polar groups on the near-surface region of the particles as indicated by scanning electron microscopy and by fitting of high-resolution X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy C 1s spectra, respectively. Even at low concentrations (1–30 µg/ml), photoaged microspheres at 1 and 5 µm in diameter exerted more pronounced biological responses in the A549 cells than was caused by pristine microspheres. High-content imaging analysis revealed S and G2 cell cycle accumulation and morphological changes, which were also more pronounced in A549 cells treated with photoaged microspheres, and further influenced by the size, dose, and time of exposures. Polystyrene microspheres reduced monolayer barrier integrity and slowed regrowth in a wound healing assay in a manner dependent on dose, photoaging, and size of the microsphere. UV-photoaging generally enhanced the toxicity of polystyrene microspheres in A549 cells. Understanding the influence of weathering and environmental aging, along with size, shape, and chemistry, on microplastics biocompatibility may be an essential consideration for incorporation of different plastics in products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10966080
Volume :
193
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Toxicological Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163691538
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfad023