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Clearance Kinetics of Fullerene C60 Nanoparticles from Rat Lungs after Intratracheal C60 Instillation and Inhalation C60 Exposure

Authors :
Yasuo Morimoto
Moritaka Tamura
Hiroaki Tao
Shigehisa Endoh
Toshihiko Myojo
Yasukazu Yoshida
Junko Nakanishi
Tetsuya Nakazato
Naohide Shinohara
Hiroko Fukui
Manabu Shimada
Kazuhiro Yamamoto
Source :
Toxicological Sciences. 118:564-573
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2010.

Abstract

Fullerene (carbon sixty [C(60)]) has potential industrial and medical applications. In the future, people working in or residing near manufacturing facilities may be exposed to C(60). Therefore, quantitative data on long-term C(60) clearance from the lungs are required. To estimate the clearance rate and deposition fraction of C(60) from inhalation exposure, the C(60) burden in the lungs, liver, and brain of rats was determined after intratracheal instillation and inhalation. Male Wistar rats were intratracheally instilled with different concentrations of a C(60) suspension prepared with Tween 80 (geometric mean [GM] of particle diameter based on number, 18-29 nm; geometric standard deviation [GSD] of particle diameter, 1.5; and doses, 100, 200, and 1000 micrograms per body) or exposed to a C(60) aerosol prepared with nebulizer (GM of particle diameter based on number, 96 nm; GSD of particle diameter, 2.0; and exposure level, 120 μg/m(3)). C(60) burden in the lungs, liver, and brain was determined at various time points (1 h to 6 months) by a newly developed sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography-ultraviolet absorptiometry combined with extraction and concentration of C(60) from the organs. C(60) clearance was evaluated using a 2-compartment model: fast clearance after deposition on lung surface and slow clearance after retention in the epithelium. The detection limit of our analysis method was 8.9 ng/g tissue. Pulmonary C(60) burden decreased with time and depended on the C(60) concentration administered. The concentration of C(60) in the liver and brain was below the detection limit: 8.9 ng/g tissue. The half-life of intratracheally instilled C(60) was 15-28 days. The deposition mass fraction of inhaled C(60) was 0.14. Mode evaluation revealed that most instilled particles could be eliminated by the fast clearance pathway. This finding is consistent with the transmission electron microscopy finding that many particles were present in alveolar macrophages.

Details

ISSN :
10960929 and 10966080
Volume :
118
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Toxicological Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1801b4bf1e2351a8ca01740862976771
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfq288