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 MikuškaPublished 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.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- quantum dots
- visible light
- low dose
- high dose
- high fat diet induced
- immune response
- induced apoptosis
- dendritic cells
- peripheral blood
- emergency department
- cell proliferation
- clinical trial
- metabolic syndrome
- anti inflammatory
- skeletal muscle
- toll like receptor
- human health
- wild type
- stem cell transplantation
- inflammatory response
- innate immune
- cell cycle arrest
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- climate change
- placebo controlled
- double blind