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Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles Modulate Systemic Immune Response and Increase Levels of Reduced Glutathione in Mice after Seven-Week Inhalation.

Miroslava Lehotska MikusovaMilena BusovaJana TulinskaVlasta MasanovaAurelia LiskovaIveta UhnakovaMaria DusinskaZora KrivosikovaEva RollerovaRadka AlacovaLadislava WsolovaMira HorvathovaMichaela SzabovaNorbert LukanZbynek VeceraPavel CoufalikKamil KrumalLukáš AlexaVojtech ThonPavel PilerMarcela BuchtováLucie VrlikovaPavel MoravecDusan GalandaPavel Mikuška
Published in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO 2 NPs) are used in a wide range of applications. Although inhalation of NPs is one of the most important toxicologically relevant routes, experimental studies on potential harmful effects of TiO 2 NPs using a whole-body inhalation chamber model are rare. In this study, the profile of lymphocyte markers, functional immunoassays, and antioxidant defense markers were analyzed to evaluate the potential adverse effects of seven-week inhalation exposure to two different concentrations of TiO 2 NPs (0.00167 and 0.1308 mg TiO 2 /m 3 ) in mice. A dose-dependent effect of TiO 2 NPs on innate immunity was evident in the form of stimulated phagocytic activity of monocytes in low-dose mice and suppressed secretory function of monocytes (IL-18) in high-dose animals. The effect of TiO 2 NPs on adaptive immunity, manifested in the spleen by a decrease in the percentage of T-cells, a reduction in T-helper cells, and a dose-dependent decrease in lymphocyte cytokine production, may indicate immunosuppression in exposed mice. The dose-dependent increase in GSH concentration and GSH/GSSG ratio in whole blood demonstrated stimulated antioxidant defense against oxidative stress induced by TiO 2 NP exposure.
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