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Biokinetics of subacutely co-inhaled same size gold and silver nanoparticlesopen access

Authors
Lee, P.Kim, J.K.Jo, M.S.Kim, H.P.Ahn, K.Park, Jung DuckGulumian, M.Oberdörster, G.Yu, I.J.
Issue Date
Mar-2023
Publisher
NLM (Medline)
Keywords
Biokinetics; Clearance; Co-inhalation exposure; Elimination; Gold nanoparticles; Silver nanoparticles; Tissue distribution; Toxicokinetics; Translocation
Citation
Particle and fibre toxicology, v.20, no.1, pp 9
Journal Title
Particle and fibre toxicology
Volume
20
Number
1
Start Page
9
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/66966
DOI
10.1186/s12989-023-00515-z
ISSN
1743-8977
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Toxicokinetics of nanomaterials, including studies on the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination of nanomaterials, are essential in assessing their potential health effects. The fate of nanomaterials after inhalation exposure to multiple nanomaterials is not clearly understood. METHODS: Male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to similar sizes of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs, 10.86 nm) and gold nanoparticles (AuNPs, 10.82 nm) for 28 days (6-h/day, 5-days/week for four weeks) either with separate NP inhalation exposures or with combined co-exposure in a nose-only inhalation system. Mass concentrations sampled from the breathing zone were AuNP 19.34 ± 2.55 μg/m3 and AgNP 17.38 ± 1.88 μg/m3 for separate exposure and AuNP 8.20 μg/m3 and AgNP 8.99 μg/m3 for co-exposure. Lung retention and clearance were previously determined on day 1 (6-h) of exposure (E-1) and on post-exposure days 1, 7, and 28 (PEO-1, PEO-7, and PEO-28, respectively). In addition, the fate of nanoparticles, including translocation and elimination from the lung to the major organs, were determined during the post-exposure observation period. RESULTS: AuNP was translocated to the extrapulmonary organs, including the liver, kidney, spleen, testis, epididymis, olfactory bulb, hilar and brachial lymph nodes, and brain after subacute inhalation and showed biopersistence regardless of AuNP single exposure or AuNP + AgNP co-exposure, showing similar elimination half-time. In contrast, Ag was translocated to the tissues and rapidly eliminated from the tissues regardless of AuNP co-exposure. Ag was continually accumulated in the olfactory bulb and brain and persistent until PEO-28. CONCLUSION: Our co-exposure study of AuNP and AgNP indicated that soluble AgNP and insoluble AuNP translocated differently, showing soluble AgNP could be dissolved into Ag ion to translocate to the extrapulmonary organs and rapidly removed from most organs except the brain and olfactory bulb. Insoluble AuNPs were continually translocated to the extrapulmonary organs, and they were not eliminated rapidly. © 2023. The Author(s).
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