PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Co-exposure with fullerene may strengthen health effects of organic industrial chemicals.

  • Maili Lehto,
  • Topi Karilainen,
  • Tomasz Róg,
  • Oana Cramariuc,
  • Esa Vanhala,
  • Jarkko Tornaeus,
  • Helena Taberman,
  • Janne Jänis,
  • Harri Alenius,
  • Ilpo Vattulainen,
  • Olli Laine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114490
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
p. e114490

Abstract

Read online

In vitro toxicological studies together with atomistic molecular dynamics simulations show that occupational co-exposure with C60 fullerene may strengthen the health effects of organic industrial chemicals. The chemicals studied are acetophenone, benzaldehyde, benzyl alcohol, m-cresol, and toluene which can be used with fullerene as reagents or solvents in industrial processes. Potential co-exposure scenarios include a fullerene dust and organic chemical vapor, or a fullerene solution aerosolized in workplace air. Unfiltered and filtered mixtures of C60 and organic chemicals represent different co-exposure scenarios in in vitro studies where acute cytotoxicity and immunotoxicity of C60 and organic chemicals are tested together and alone by using human THP-1-derived macrophages. Statistically significant co-effects are observed for an unfiltered mixture of benzaldehyde and C60 that is more cytotoxic than benzaldehyde alone, and for a filtered mixture of m-cresol and C60 that is slightly less cytotoxic than m-cresol. Hydrophobicity of chemicals correlates with co-effects when secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and TNF-α is considered. Complementary atomistic molecular dynamics simulations reveal that C60 co-aggregates with all chemicals in aqueous environment. Stable aggregates have a fullerene-rich core and a chemical-rich surface layer, and while essentially all C60 molecules aggregate together, a portion of organic molecules remains in water.