Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment

Diesel engines are a significant source of nitrogen oxides (NO<sub>x</sub>) and particulate matter (PM) which may cause adverse health effects on the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems. There is little consistency between many studies to establish which engine parameter is a key factor...

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Main Authors: Lucky Joeng, Shahnaz Bakand, Amanda Hayes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2015-07-01
Series:AIMS Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/environmental/article/319/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-d1edf10d193b4996bfc7c67f4e25f17c2020-11-25T01:49:23ZengAIMS PressAIMS Environmental Science2372-03522015-07-012371873610.3934/environsci.2015.3.718201503718Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessmentLucky Joeng0Shahnaz BakandAmanda Hayes1School of Risk and Safety Sciences, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, AustraliaSchool of Chemistry, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, AustraliaDiesel engines are a significant source of nitrogen oxides (NO<sub>x</sub>) and particulate matter (PM) which may cause adverse health effects on the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems. There is little consistency between many studies to establish which engine parameter is a key factor to determine the toxicity of diesel exhaust. The aim of this study was to correlate engine operating systems with cytotoxicity using human cells. A dynamic direct exposure system containing human cells grown at the air liquid interface (ALI) was employed to expose human derived cells to diesel exhaust emitted under a range of engine loads. To determine correlation between engine load and cytotoxicity, concentrations of NO<sub>x</sub> and carbon (organic and elemental) were measured. Comparison between filtered and unfiltered exhaust was also made. To assess cytotoxicity and determine mechanisms responsible for toxic effects, various bioassays measuring a range of endpoints were used including: cell metabolism (MTS), cell energy production (ATP) and cell lysosome integrity (NRU). The human cells selected in this study were lung (A549) and liver (HepG2) derived cells to detect if observed cytotoxicity was basal (i.e. affect all cell types) or organ-specific. Results showed that NO<sub>x</sub> gas concentrations increased as engine load increased which resulted in significant cytotoxicity to both A549 and HepG2 cells. In contrast carbon measurements remained relatively constant across loads with no observable significant difference in cytotoxicity by filtering diesel exhaust. This result suggests that the gaseous component of diesel exhaust may contribute higher cytotoxicity than the particulate component. Post exposure incubation was an important factor to consider as only gaseous components of diesel exhaust exhibited observable immediate effects. Our findings suggest engine torque as a reliable indicator of cytotoxicity on human cells. The advantages of the dynamic direct exposure method include a more realistic representation of human respiratory toxicity and modularity which would allow for the analyses of pollution other than diesel exhaust.http://www.aimspress.com/environmental/article/319/fulltext.htmladenosine triphosphate (ATP)diesel exhaustneutral red uptakeMTS (tetrazolium salt)A549direct exposure methodAir Liquid Interface (ALI)toxicitypollutionparticulatesNO<sub>X</sub>
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucky Joeng
Shahnaz Bakand
Amanda Hayes
spellingShingle Lucky Joeng
Shahnaz Bakand
Amanda Hayes
Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
AIMS Environmental Science
adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
diesel exhaust
neutral red uptake
MTS (tetrazolium salt)
A549
direct exposure method
Air Liquid Interface (ALI)
toxicity
pollution
particulates
NO<sub>X</sub>
author_facet Lucky Joeng
Shahnaz Bakand
Amanda Hayes
author_sort Lucky Joeng
title Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
title_short Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
title_full Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
title_fullStr Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
title_full_unstemmed Diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
title_sort diesel exhaust pollution: chemical monitoring and cytotoxicity assessment
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Environmental Science
issn 2372-0352
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Diesel engines are a significant source of nitrogen oxides (NO<sub>x</sub>) and particulate matter (PM) which may cause adverse health effects on the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems. There is little consistency between many studies to establish which engine parameter is a key factor to determine the toxicity of diesel exhaust. The aim of this study was to correlate engine operating systems with cytotoxicity using human cells. A dynamic direct exposure system containing human cells grown at the air liquid interface (ALI) was employed to expose human derived cells to diesel exhaust emitted under a range of engine loads. To determine correlation between engine load and cytotoxicity, concentrations of NO<sub>x</sub> and carbon (organic and elemental) were measured. Comparison between filtered and unfiltered exhaust was also made. To assess cytotoxicity and determine mechanisms responsible for toxic effects, various bioassays measuring a range of endpoints were used including: cell metabolism (MTS), cell energy production (ATP) and cell lysosome integrity (NRU). The human cells selected in this study were lung (A549) and liver (HepG2) derived cells to detect if observed cytotoxicity was basal (i.e. affect all cell types) or organ-specific. Results showed that NO<sub>x</sub> gas concentrations increased as engine load increased which resulted in significant cytotoxicity to both A549 and HepG2 cells. In contrast carbon measurements remained relatively constant across loads with no observable significant difference in cytotoxicity by filtering diesel exhaust. This result suggests that the gaseous component of diesel exhaust may contribute higher cytotoxicity than the particulate component. Post exposure incubation was an important factor to consider as only gaseous components of diesel exhaust exhibited observable immediate effects. Our findings suggest engine torque as a reliable indicator of cytotoxicity on human cells. The advantages of the dynamic direct exposure method include a more realistic representation of human respiratory toxicity and modularity which would allow for the analyses of pollution other than diesel exhaust.
topic adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
diesel exhaust
neutral red uptake
MTS (tetrazolium salt)
A549
direct exposure method
Air Liquid Interface (ALI)
toxicity
pollution
particulates
NO<sub>X</sub>
url http://www.aimspress.com/environmental/article/319/fulltext.html
work_keys_str_mv AT luckyjoeng dieselexhaustpollutionchemicalmonitoringandcytotoxicityassessment
AT shahnazbakand dieselexhaustpollutionchemicalmonitoringandcytotoxicityassessment
AT amandahayes dieselexhaustpollutionchemicalmonitoringandcytotoxicityassessment
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