Wildfires
are a major source of biomass burning aerosol to the
atmosphere, with their incidence and intensity expected to increase
in a warmer future climate. However, the toxicity evolution of biomass
burning organic aerosol (BBOA) during atmospheric aging remains poorly
understood. In this study, we report a unique set of chemical and
toxicological metrics of BBOA from pine wood smoldering during multiphase
aging by gas-phase hydroxyl radicals (OH). Both the fresh and OH-aged
BBOA show activity relevant to adverse health outcomes. The results
from two acellular assays (DTT and DCFH) show significant oxidative
potential (OP) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation in OH-aged
BBOA. Also, radical concentrations in the aerosol assessed by electron
paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy increased by 50% following
heterogeneous aging. This enhancement was accompanied by a transition
from predominantly carbon-centered radicals (85%) in the fresh aerosol
to predominantly oxygen-centered radicals (76%) following aging. Both
the fresh and aged biomass burning aerosols trigger prominent antioxidant
defense during the in vitro exposure, indicating
the induction of oxidative stress by BBOA in the atmosphere. By connecting
chemical composition and toxicity using an integrated approach, we
show that short-term aging initiated by OH radicals can produce biomass
burning particles with a higher particle-bound ROS generation capacity,
which are therefore a more relevant exposure hazard for residents
in large population centers close to wildfire regions than previously
studied fresh biomass burning emissions