Cargando…

Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective

BACKGROUND: Production of ferrochromium alloys (FeCr), master alloys for stainless steel manufacture, involves casting and crushing processes where particles inevitably become airborne and potentially inhaled. The aim of this study was to assess potential health hazards induced by inhalation of diff...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hedberg, Yolanda, Gustafsson, Johanna, Karlsson, Hanna L, Möller, Lennart, Wallinder, Inger Odnevall
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2941740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20815895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-8977-7-23
_version_ 1782186930858885120
author Hedberg, Yolanda
Gustafsson, Johanna
Karlsson, Hanna L
Möller, Lennart
Wallinder, Inger Odnevall
author_facet Hedberg, Yolanda
Gustafsson, Johanna
Karlsson, Hanna L
Möller, Lennart
Wallinder, Inger Odnevall
author_sort Hedberg, Yolanda
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Production of ferrochromium alloys (FeCr), master alloys for stainless steel manufacture, involves casting and crushing processes where particles inevitably become airborne and potentially inhaled. The aim of this study was to assess potential health hazards induced by inhalation of different well-characterized iron- and chromium-based particles, i.e. ferrochromium (FeCr), ferrosiliconchromium (FeSiCr), stainless steel (316L), iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), and chromium(III)oxide (Cr(2)O(3)), in different size fractions using in vitro methods. This was done by assessing the extent and speciation of released metals in synthetic biological medium and by analyzing particle reactivity and toxicity towards cultured human lung cells (A549). RESULTS: The amount of released metals normalized to the particle surface area increased with decreasing particle size for all alloy particles, whereas the opposite situation was valid for particles of the pure metals. These effects were evident in artificial lysosomal fluid (ALF) of pH 4.5 containing complexing agents, but not in neutral or weakly alkaline biological media. Chromium, iron and nickel were released to very low extent from all alloy particles, and from particles of Cr due to the presence of a Cr(III)-rich protective surface oxide. Released elements were neither proportional to the bulk nor to the surface composition after the investigated 168 hours of exposure. Due to a surface oxide with less protective properties, significantly more iron was released from pure iron particles compared with the alloys. Cr was predominantly released as Cr(III) from all particles investigated and was strongly complexed by organic species of ALF. Cr(2)O(3 )particles showed hemolytic activity, but none of the alloy particles did. Fine-sized particles of stainless steel caused however DNA damage, measured with the comet assay after 4 h exposure. None of the particles revealed any significant cytotoxicity in terms of cell death after 24 h exposure. CONCLUSION: It is evident that particle and alloy characteristics such as particle size and surface composition are important aspects to consider when assessing particle toxicity and metal release from alloy particles compared to pure metal particles. Generated results clearly elucidate that neither the low released concentrations of metals primarily as a result of protective and poorly soluble surface oxides, nor non-bioavailable chromium complexes, nor the particles themselves of occupational relevance induced significant acute toxic response, with exception of DNA damage from stainless steel.
format Text
id pubmed-2941740
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-29417402010-09-20 Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective Hedberg, Yolanda Gustafsson, Johanna Karlsson, Hanna L Möller, Lennart Wallinder, Inger Odnevall Part Fibre Toxicol Research BACKGROUND: Production of ferrochromium alloys (FeCr), master alloys for stainless steel manufacture, involves casting and crushing processes where particles inevitably become airborne and potentially inhaled. The aim of this study was to assess potential health hazards induced by inhalation of different well-characterized iron- and chromium-based particles, i.e. ferrochromium (FeCr), ferrosiliconchromium (FeSiCr), stainless steel (316L), iron (Fe), chromium (Cr), and chromium(III)oxide (Cr(2)O(3)), in different size fractions using in vitro methods. This was done by assessing the extent and speciation of released metals in synthetic biological medium and by analyzing particle reactivity and toxicity towards cultured human lung cells (A549). RESULTS: The amount of released metals normalized to the particle surface area increased with decreasing particle size for all alloy particles, whereas the opposite situation was valid for particles of the pure metals. These effects were evident in artificial lysosomal fluid (ALF) of pH 4.5 containing complexing agents, but not in neutral or weakly alkaline biological media. Chromium, iron and nickel were released to very low extent from all alloy particles, and from particles of Cr due to the presence of a Cr(III)-rich protective surface oxide. Released elements were neither proportional to the bulk nor to the surface composition after the investigated 168 hours of exposure. Due to a surface oxide with less protective properties, significantly more iron was released from pure iron particles compared with the alloys. Cr was predominantly released as Cr(III) from all particles investigated and was strongly complexed by organic species of ALF. Cr(2)O(3 )particles showed hemolytic activity, but none of the alloy particles did. Fine-sized particles of stainless steel caused however DNA damage, measured with the comet assay after 4 h exposure. None of the particles revealed any significant cytotoxicity in terms of cell death after 24 h exposure. CONCLUSION: It is evident that particle and alloy characteristics such as particle size and surface composition are important aspects to consider when assessing particle toxicity and metal release from alloy particles compared to pure metal particles. Generated results clearly elucidate that neither the low released concentrations of metals primarily as a result of protective and poorly soluble surface oxides, nor non-bioavailable chromium complexes, nor the particles themselves of occupational relevance induced significant acute toxic response, with exception of DNA damage from stainless steel. BioMed Central 2010-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2941740/ /pubmed/20815895 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-8977-7-23 Text en Copyright ©2010 Hedberg et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Hedberg, Yolanda
Gustafsson, Johanna
Karlsson, Hanna L
Möller, Lennart
Wallinder, Inger Odnevall
Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title_full Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title_fullStr Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title_full_unstemmed Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title_short Bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
title_sort bioaccessibility, bioavailability and toxicity of commercially relevant iron- and chromium-based particles: in vitro studies with an inhalation perspective
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2941740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20815895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1743-8977-7-23
work_keys_str_mv AT hedbergyolanda bioaccessibilitybioavailabilityandtoxicityofcommerciallyrelevantironandchromiumbasedparticlesinvitrostudieswithaninhalationperspective
AT gustafssonjohanna bioaccessibilitybioavailabilityandtoxicityofcommerciallyrelevantironandchromiumbasedparticlesinvitrostudieswithaninhalationperspective
AT karlssonhannal bioaccessibilitybioavailabilityandtoxicityofcommerciallyrelevantironandchromiumbasedparticlesinvitrostudieswithaninhalationperspective
AT mollerlennart bioaccessibilitybioavailabilityandtoxicityofcommerciallyrelevantironandchromiumbasedparticlesinvitrostudieswithaninhalationperspective
AT wallinderingerodnevall bioaccessibilitybioavailabilityandtoxicityofcommerciallyrelevantironandchromiumbasedparticlesinvitrostudieswithaninhalationperspective