Abstract

Abstract The impact of micro-, nanoplastics (MNPs) and particulate matter (PM) upon human health are escalating concerns worldwide. MNPs released from surgical face masks, and PM from ambient air pollution, can both be inhaled and consequently have potentially significant negative impacts upon human health, particularly on our lung epithelial cell structure and function. Currently, the impact of the realistic co-exposure of these samples is unknown. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the potential inhaled hazardous health effects of the co-exposure of MNPs and ambient (indoor and outdoor) air PM. Using an advanced in vitro testing model combined with a specific mechanistic toxicology approach, it is hypothesised that the co-exposure approach will elucidate important information regarding the differential toxicology of ambient (indoor and outdoor) air PM. The in vitro system will consist of alveolar epithelial type-II cells (-NCI-H441) combined with differentiated monocytes (dTHP-1), cultured at the relevant in vivo ratio and at the air-liquid interface. Cell cultures will be exposed for both 4 and 24hrs to MNP (commercially available polypropylene (PP) and blue face mask extracted PP), PM (NIST 2584 and NIST 1649a respectively) and then subsequent MNP+PM (both NIST 2584 and NIST 1649a respectively) via aerosol (VITROCELL Cloud12), using alternative dosimetry patterns. The biochemical endpoints of cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, (pro-)inflammatory response and genotoxicity, will then be assessed to provide the basis for future global analytical techniques to examine the currently unknown human hazard of inhaled MNPs (+/- PM).

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