Physicochemical properties of 26 carbon nanotubes as predictors for pulmonary inflammation and acute phase response in mice following intratracheal lung exposure

Pernille Høgh Danielsen, Sarah Søs Poulsen, Kristina Bram Knudsen, Per Axel Clausen, Keld Alstrup Jensen, Håkan Wallin, Ulla Vogel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) vary in physicochemical properties which makes risk assessment challenging. Mice were pulmonary exposed to 26 well-characterized CNTs using the same experimental design and followed for one day, 28 days or 3 months. This resulted in a unique dataset, which was used to identify physicochemical predictors of pulmonary inflammation and systemic acute phase response. MWCNT diameter and SWCNT specific surface area were predictive of lower and higher neutrophil influx, respectively. Manganese and iron were shown to be predictive of higher neutrophil influx at day 1 post-exposure, whereas nickel content interestingly was predictive of lower neutrophil influx at all three time points and of lowered acute phase response at day 1 and 3 months post-exposure. It was not possible to separate effects of properties such as specific surface area and length in the multiple regression analyses due to co-variation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number104413
JournalEnvironmental Toxicology and Pharmacology
Volume107
Number of pages11
ISSN1382-6689
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Keywords

  • Carbon nanotubes
  • Inflammation
  • Acute phase response
  • Nanomaterial
  • Metals
  • Toxicity

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