4.7 Article

Impact of Differentiated Macrophage-Like Cells on the Transcriptional Toxicity Profile of CuO Nanoparticles in Co-Cultured Lung Epithelial Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22095044

Keywords

nanotoxicology; co-culture; CuO; A549; THP-1; high-throughput RT-qPCR; gene expression profiles

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [03XP0211, 03XP0195]

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This study demonstrates that co-cultures of epithelial and immune cells can reveal additional pro-inflammatory responses of CuO nanoparticles on epithelial cells beyond the known mode of action. Using an advanced in vitro model, it extends the detection of cellular effects provoked by nanomaterials by an immunological response and emphasizes the importance of using such models to address a more comprehensive mode of action.
To mimic more realistic lung tissue conditions, co-cultures of epithelial and immune cells are one comparatively easy-to-use option. To reveal the impact of immune cells on the mode of action (MoA) of CuO nanoparticles (NP) on epithelial cells, A549 cells as a model for epithelial cells have been cultured with or without differentiated THP-1 cells, as a model for macrophages. After 24 h of submerged incubation, cytotoxicity and transcriptional toxicity profiles were obtained and compared between the cell culture systems. Dose-dependent cytotoxicity was apparent starting from 8.0 mu g/cm(2) CuO NP. With regard to gene expression profiles, no differences between the cell models were observed concerning metal homeostasis, oxidative stress, and DNA damage, confirming the known MoA of CuO NP, i.e., endocytotic particle uptake, intracellular particle dissolution within lysosomes with subsequent metal ion deliberation, increased oxidative stress, and genotoxicity. However, applying a co-culture of epithelial and macrophage-like cells, CuO NP additionally provoked a pro-inflammatory response involving NLRP3 inflammasome and pro-inflammatory transcription factor activation. This study demonstrates that the application of this easy-to-use advanced in vitro model is able to extend the detection of cellular effects provoked by nanomaterials by an immunological response and emphasizes the use of such models to address a more comprehensive MoA.

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