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Inflammatory responses of urban air PM modulated by chemical composition and different air quality situations in Nanjing, China

Authors :
Teemu J, Rönkkö
Maija-Riitta, Hirvonen
Mikko S, Happo
Tuukka, Ihantola
Henri, Hakkarainen
Maria-Viola, Martikainen
Cheng, Gu
Qin'geng, Wang
Jorma, Jokiniemi
Mika, Komppula
Pasi I, Jalava
Source :
Environmental research. 192
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The health risks of air pollutants and ambient particulate matter (PM) are widely known. PM composition and toxicity have shown substantial spatiotemporal variability. Yet, the connections between PM composition and toxicological and health effects are vaguely understood. This is a crucial gap in knowledge that needs to be addressed in order to establish air quality guidelines and limit values that consider the chemical composition of PM instead of the current assumption of equal toxicity per inhaled dose. Here, we demonstrate further evidence for varying toxicological effects of urban PM at equal mass concentrations, and estimate how PM composition and emission source characteristics influenced this variation. We exposed a co-culture model mimicking alveolar epithelial cells and macrophages with size-segregated urban ambient PM collected before, during, and after the Nanjing Youth Olympic Games 2014. We measured the release of a set of cytokines, cell cycle alterations, and genotoxicity, and assessed the spatiotemporal variations in these responses by factorial multiple regression analysis. Additionally, we investigated how a previously identified set of emission sources and chemical components affected these variations by mixed model analysis. PM-exposure induced cytokine signaling, most notably by inducing dose-dependent increases of macrophage-regulating GM-CSF and proinflammatory TNFα, IL-6, and IL-1β concentrations, modest dose-dependent increase for cytoprotective VEGF-A, but very low to no responses for anti-inflammatory IL-10 and immunoregulatory IFNγ, respectively. We observed substantial differences in proinflammatory cytokine production depending on PM sampling period, location, and time of day. The proinflammatory response correlated positively with cell cycle arrest in G1/G0 phase and loss of cellular metabolic activity. Furthermore, PM

Details

ISSN :
10960953
Volume :
192
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental research
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........326fd4a5a2d129ed7624279d773ec0b6