18 research outputs found
Influence of wood species on toxicity of log-wood stove combustion aerosols: A parallel animal and air-liquid interface cell exposure study on spruce and pine smoke
Background
Wood combustion emissions have been studied previously either by in vitro or in vivo models using collected particles, yet most studies have neglected gaseous compounds. Furthermore, a more accurate and holistic view of the toxicity of aerosols can be gained with parallel in vitro and in vivo studies using direct exposure methods. Moreover, modern exposure techniques such as air-liquid interface (ALI) exposures enable better assessment of the toxicity of the applied aerosols than, for example, the previous state-of-the-art submerged cell exposure techniques.
Methods
We used three different ALI exposure systems in parallel to study the toxicological effects of spruce and pine combustion emissions in human alveolar epithelial (A549) and murine macrophage (RAW264.7) cell lines. A whole-body mouse inhalation system was also used to expose C57BL/6 J mice to aerosol emissions. Moreover, gaseous and particulate fractions were studied separately in one of the cell exposure systems. After exposure, the cells and animals were measured for various parameters of cytotoxicity, inflammation, genotoxicity, transcriptome and proteome.
Results
We found that diluted (1:15) exposure pine combustion emissions (PM1 mass 7.7 ± 6.5 mg m− 3, 41 mg MJ) contained, on average, more PM and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) than spruce (PM1 mass 4.3 ± 5.1 mg m− 3, 26 mg MJ− 1) emissions, which instead showed a higher concentration of inorganic metals in the emission aerosol. Both A549 cells and mice exposed to these emissions showed low levels of inflammation but significantly increased genotoxicity. Gaseous emission compounds produced similar genotoxicity and a higher inflammatory response than the corresponding complete combustion emission in A549 cells. Systems biology approaches supported the findings, but we detected differing responses between in vivo and in vitro experiments.
Conclusions
Comprehensive in vitro and in vivo exposure studies with emission characterization and systems biology approaches revealed further information on the effects of combustion aerosol toxicity than could be achieved with either method alone. Interestingly, in vitro and in vivo exposures showed the opposite order of the highest DNA damage. In vitro measurements also indicated that the gaseous fraction of emission aerosols may be more important in causing adverse toxicological effects. Combustion aerosols of different wood species result in mild but aerosol specific in vitro and in vivo effects
Emissions from a modern log wood masonry heater and wood pellet boiler : Composition and biological impact on air-liquid interface exposed human lung cancer cells
The consumption of wood fuel is markedly increasing in developing and industrialized countries. Known side effects of wood smoke inhalation manifest in proinflammatory signaling, oxidative stress, DNA damage and hence increased cancer risk. In this study, the composition and acute biological impact of emissions of state-of-the-art wood combustion compliances: masonry heater (MH) and pellet boiler (PB) were investigated. Therefore A549 cells were exposed to emission aerosols in an automated air-liquid interface exposure station followed by cytotoxicity, transcriptome and proteome analyses. In parallel, aerosols were subjected to a chemical and physical haracterization. Compared to PB, the MH combustion at the same dilution ratio resulted in a 3-fold higher particle mass concentration (PM2.5) and deposited dose (PB: 27 2 ng/cm2, MH; 73 12 ng/cm2). Additionally, the MH aerosol displayed a substantially larger concentration of aldehydes, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) or oxidized PAH. Gene ontology analysis of transcriptome of A549 cells exposed to MH emissions revealed the activation of proinflammatory response and key signaling cascades MAP kinase and JAK-STAT. Furthermore, CYP1A1, an essential enzyme in PAH metabolism, was induced. PB combustion aerosol activated the proinflammatory marker IL6 and different transport processes. The proteomics data uncovered induction of DNA damage-associated proteins in response to PB and DNA doublestrand break processing proteins in response to MH emissions. Taking together, the MH produces emissions with a higher particle dose and more toxic compounds while causing only mild biological responses. This finding points to a significant mitigating effect of antioxidative compounds in MH wood smoke
Characterization and testing of a new environmental chamber
A 29 m<sup>3</sup> Teflon chamber, designed for studies on the aging of combustion
aerosols, at the University of Eastern Finland is described and
characterized. The chamber is part of a research facility, called Ilmari,
where small-scale combustion devices, a dynamometer for vehicle exhaust
studies, dilution systems, the chamber, and cell and animal exposure
devices are located side by side under the same roof. The small
surface-to-volume ratio of the chamber enables reasonably long experiment
times, with particle wall loss rate constants of 0.088, 0.080, 0.045, and
0.040 h<sup>−1</sup> for polydisperse, 50, 100, and 200 nm monodisperse aerosols,
respectively. The NO<sub>2</sub> photolysis rate can be adjusted from 0 to
0.62 min<sup>−1</sup>. The irradiance spectrum is centered at either 350 or
365 nm, and the maximum irradiance, produced by up to 160 blacklight lamps,
is 29.7 W m<sup>−2</sup>, which corresponds to the ultraviolet (UV) irradiance in Central
Finland at noon on a sunny day in the midsummer. The temperature inside the
chamber is uniform and can be kept at 25±1 °C. The chamber
is kept in an overpressure with a moving top frame, which reduces sample
dilution and entrance of contamination during an experiment. The
functionality of the chamber was tested with oxidation experiments of
toluene, resulting in secondary organic aerosol (SOA) yields of 12–42%,
depending on the initial conditions, such as NO<sub>x</sub> concentration and UV
irradiation. The highest gaseous oxidation product yields of 12.4–19.5%
and 5.8–19.5% were detected with ions corresponding to methyl glyoxal
(<i>m/z</i> 73.029) and 4-oxo-2-pentenal (<i>m/z</i> 99.044), respectively. Overall,
reasonable yields of SOA and gaseous reaction products, comparable to those
obtained in other laboratories, were obtained