Summary
Engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) are now used in a wide variety of fields, and thus their safety should urgently be assessed and secured. It has been suggested that inflammatory responses via the phagocytosis of ENMs by macrophages is a key mechanism for their genotoxicity. The present study was conducted to establish a mechanism-based assay to evaluate the genotoxicity of ENMs under conditions simulating an in vivo situation, featuring a co-culture system of murine lung resident cells (GDL1) and immune cells (RAW264.7). GDL1 were cultured with or without RAW264.7, exposed to a multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWCNT), and then analyzed for mutagenicity and underlying mechanisms. Mutation frequencies induced in GDL1 by the MWCNT were significantly greater with the co-existence of RAW264.7 than in its absence. Mutation spectra observed in GDL1 co-cultured with RAW264.7 were different from those seen in GDL1 cultured alone, but similar to those observed in the lungs of mice exposed to the MWCNT in vivo. Inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-1β and TNF-α, were produced from RAW264.7 cells treated with the MWCNT. The generation of reactive oxygen species and the formation of 8-oxodeoxyguanosine in GDL1 exposed to the MWCNT were greater in the co-culture conditions than in the single culture conditions. Based on these findings, it is indicated that inflammatory responses are involved in the genotoxicity of MWCNT, and that the presently established, novel in vitro assay featuring a co-culture system of tissue resident cells with immune cells is suitable to evaluate the genotoxicity of ENMs.
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