4.7 Article

Evidence for the presence of air pollution nanoparticles in placental tissue cells

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 751, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142235

关键词

Air pollution, translocation of particulate matter; Placenta; Carbonaceous and metal-bearing PM; Nanoparticles; Magnetite, macrophage; Phagocytosis

资金

  1. Barts Charity, England, UK [MGU0312]

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The study found that inhaled metal-bearing air pollution-derived PM can translocate to distant organs and be taken up by tissue resident phagocytes in vivo, including potentially affecting the fetus in the uterus. This suggests that the human placenta may be a primary target for these particles.
Inhaled particulate matter (PM) from combustion- and friction-sourced air pollution adversely affects organs distant from the lung. A putative mechanism for the remote effect of inhaled PM is that ultrafine, nano-sized fraction (<100 nm) translocates across the air-tissue barrier, directly interacting with phagocytic tissue cells. Although PM is reported in other tissues, whether it is phagocytosed by non-respiratory tissue resident cells is unclear. Using the placenta as an accessible organ for phagocytic cells, we sought to seek evidence for air pollution-derived PM in tissue resident phagocytes. Macrophage-enriched placental cells (MEPCs) were isolated, and examined by light and electron microscopy. MEPC carbon was assessed by image analysis (mean mu m2/1000 cells); particle composition and numbers were investigated using magnetic analyses and energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. MEPCs phagocytic capacity was assessed by culture with diesel exhaust PM in vitro. Fifteen placentas were analysed. Black inclusions morphologically compatible with inhaled PM were identified within MEPCs from all samples (mean +/- SEM carbon loading, 1000 MEPCs/participant of 0.004 +/- 0.001 mu m2). High resolution scanning/transmission electron microscopy revealed abundant nano-sized particle aggregates within MEPCs. MEPC PM was predominantly carbonaceous but also co-associated with a range of trace metals, indicative of high temperature (i.e. exogenous) generation. MEPCs contained readily-measurable amounts of iron-rich, ferrimagnetic particles, in concentrations/particle number concentrations ranging, respectively, from 8 to 50 ng/g and 10 to 60.107 magnetic particles/g (wet wt) MEPCs. Extracted MEPCs (n = 20/ placenta) were phagocytic for PM since all cells showed increased carbon area after culture with diesel PM in vitro (mean +/- SEM increase 7.55 +/- 1.26 mu m2 carbon PM). These findings demonstrate that inhaled, metal-bearing, air pollution-derived PM can not only translocate to distant organs, but is taken up by tissue resident phagocytes in vivo. The human placenta, and hence probably the fetus, thus appears to be a target for such particles. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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