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Are reactive oxygen species (ROS) a suitable metric to predict toxicity of carbonaceous aerosol particles?

Authors :
Zhi-Hui Zhang
Hartner, Elena
Utinger, Battist
Gfeller, Benjamin
Paul, Andreas
Sklorz, Martin
Czech, Hendryk
Bin Xia Yang
Xin Yi Su
Jakobi, Gert
Orasche, Jürgen
Schnelle-Kreis, Jürgen
Seongho Jeong
Gröger, Thomas
Pardo, Michal
Hohaus, Thorsten
Adam, Thomas
Kiendler-Scharr, Astrid
Rudich, Yinon
Zimmermann, Ralf
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions; 8/12/2021, p1-29, 29p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

It is being suggested that particle-bound or particle-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS), which significantly contribute to the oxidative potential (OP) of aerosol particles, are a promising metric linking aerosol compositions to toxicity and adverse health effects. However, accurate ROS quantification remains challenging due to the reactive and short-lived nature of many ROS components and the lack of appropriate analytical methods for a reliable quantification. Consequently, it remains difficult to gauge their impact on human health, especially to identify how aerosol particle sources and atmospheric processes drive particle-bound ROS formation in a real-world urban environment. In this study, using a novel online particle-bound ROS instrument (OPROSI), we comprehensively characterized and compared the formation of ROS in secondary organic aerosols (SOA) generated from organic compounds that represent anthropogenic (naphthalene, SOA<subscript>NAP</subscript>) and biogenic (β-pinene, SOA<subscript>βPIN</subscript>) precursors. The SOA mass was condensed onto soot particles (SP) under varied atmospherically relevant conditions (photochemical aging and humidity). We systematically analysed the ability of the aqueous extracts of the two aerosol types (SOA<subscript>NAP</subscript>-SP and SOA<subscript>βPIN</subscript>-SP) to induce ROS production and OP. We further investigated cytotoxicity and cellular ROS production after exposing human lung epithelial cell cultures (A549) to extracts of the two aerosols. A significant finding of this study is that more than 90% of all ROS components in both SOA types have a short lifetime, highlighting the need to develop online instruments for a meaningful quantification of ROS. Our results also show that photochemical aging promotes particle-bound ROS production and enhances the OP of the aerosols. Compared to SOA<subscript>βPIN</subscript>-SP, SOA<subscript>NAP</subscript>-SP elicited a higher acellular and cellular ROS production, a higher OP and a lower cell viability. These consistent results between chemical-based and biological-based analyses indicate that particle-bound ROS quantification could be a feasible metric to predict aerosol particle toxicity and adverse human effects. Moreover, the cellular ROS production caused by SOA exposure not only depends on aerosol type, but is also affected by exposure dose, highlighting a need to mimic the process of particle deposition onto lung cells and their interactions as realistically as possible to avoid unknown biases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807367
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151876358
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-666