Abstract

Multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) have many outstanding physical and chemical properties that make them useful in many applications in nanotechnology. However, these properties are reported to be potentially harmful for the human body. The effects of low and realistic doses of three well-characterized preparations of MWCNT, obtained from the Joint Research Centre (JRC) (NM-400, NM-401, and NM-402), were assessed in two murine macrophage lines, Raw264.7, of peritoneal origin, and MH-S, derived from alveolar macrophages. Macrophage viability, evaluated with two distinct methods, was significantly lowered by NM-401 (needle-like, average length 4 μm, diameter 67 nm) with IC50 values of 10 μg/cm2, whereas NM-400 and NM-402 (tangled, average lengths 846–1372 nm, diameter 11 nm) had much smaller effects. In contrast, at 10 μg/cm2, NM-400 and NM-402 induced the M1 marker Nos2 and, consistently, a sizable accumulation of nitrites in the medium, whereas NM-401 had no significant effect. None of the MWCNT preparations induced the M2 marker Arg1. Phagocytic activity, assessed in Raw264.7 macrophages, was significantly reduced in cells exposed to NM-401, but not to NM-400 or NM-402. When tested on Calu-3 bronchial epithelial cell monolayers, the three MWCNT preparations did not affect cell viability, but decreased the trans-epithelial electrical resistance at the maximal dose tested (80 μg/cm2), with the most evident effect detected for NM-401, even at 10 μg/cm2. In conclusion, among the possible structural determinants of the toxic effects exerted by MWCNT towards macrophages and airway epithelial cells, shape and length appear the most relevant at low, realistic doses.

Highlights

  • Since their discovery [1,2], multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) have attracted much interest owing to their excellent physicochemical, electrical, and mechanical properties and are increasingly used in a wide array of applications, such as microelectronics, energy storage, and biomedicine [3]

  • Taking into account the possibility of unwanted inhalation at the occupational level, we have extended the study to a model of bronchial epithelial cells, monitoring MWCNT-induced alterations in the trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER), a parameter not investigated by Louro et al [17], which is a marker of the barrier competence of the epithelial monolayers

  • The effects of the three MWCNT preparations on the viability of murine macrophages are shown in Figures 1 and 2

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Summary

Introduction

Since their discovery [1,2], multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) have attracted much interest owing to their excellent physicochemical, electrical, and mechanical properties and are increasingly used in a wide array of applications, such as microelectronics, energy storage, and biomedicine [3]. Every MWCNT preparation has peculiar features, such as length, diameter, aspect ratio, shape, purity, surface area, and aggregation/agglomeration tendency, each of which is potentially involved in determining the interaction between the nanomaterials and the biological systems. Respirable MWCNT agglomerates may be generated during various manufacturing steps, as a result of transfer, weighing, blending, or disposal [4]. For this reason, inhalation is considered the primary route for human exposure to MWCNT, especially in occupational settings [5]. The toxicological evaluation of each MWCNT preparation would require a case-by-case study, an unfeasible task. There has been a steady progress in the field, summarized in several excellent reviews [6,7,8,9], lack of a clear-cut identification of toxicity determinants does not yet allow a definite grouping of MWCNT

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