Role of the alveolar macrophage in lung injury: studies with ultrafine particles.

We conducted a series of experiments with ultrafine particles (approximately 20 nm) and larger particles (less than 200 nm) of "nuisance" dusts to evaluate the involvement of alveolar macrophages (AM) in particle-induced lung injury and particle translocation in rats. After intratracheal instillation of both ultrafine particles and larger particles of TiO2, we found a highly increased interstitial access of the ultrafine particles combined with a large acute inflammatory reaction as determined by lung lavage parameters. An additional experiment revealed that intratracheal instillation of phagocytized ultrafine TiO2 particles (inside AM) prevented both the pulmonary inflammatory reaction and the interstitial access of the ultrafine particles. Another experiment showed that the influx of polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) into the alveolar space unexpectedly decreased with higher doses of ultrafine particles, whereas alveolar epithelial permeability (protein leakage) increased. The divergence between PMN influx into the alveolar space and changes in alveolar epithelial permeability implies that they are separate events. Pulmonary inflammatory parameters determined by lung lavage analysis correlated best with the surface area of the retained particles rather than with their mass, volume, or numbers. Because higher doses resulted in an increased interstitialized fraction of particles, we suggest that inflammatory events induced by particles in the interstitial space can modify the inflammation in the alveolar space detectable by lung lavage. Our results demonstrate the dual role of AM for modifying particle-induced lung injury, i.e., both preventing such injury and contributing to it. We conclude that the increased pulmonary toxicity of ultrafine particles is related to their larger surface area and to their increased interstitial access.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

[1]  P. Morrow,et al.  Possible mechanisms to explain dust overloading of the lungs. , 1988, Fundamental and applied toxicology : official journal of the Society of Toxicology.

[2]  D. E. Carter,et al.  Comparative pulmonary toxicity of gallium arsenide, gallium(III) oxide, or arsenic(III) oxide intratracheally instilled into rats. , 1986, Toxicology and applied pharmacology.

[3]  O. Meurman,et al.  Relationships Between Retained Amphibole Fibres and Fibrosis in Human Lung Tissue Specimens , 1988 .

[4]  I. Adamson,et al.  Silica‐induced pulmonary fibrosis involves the reaction of particles with interstitial rather than alveolar macrophages , 1989, The Journal of pathology.

[5]  S. Takenaka,et al.  Alveolar distribution of fly ash and of titanium dioxide after long-term inhalation by Wistar rats , 1986 .

[6]  Robert Gelein,et al.  Pulmonary Tissue Access of Ultrafine Particles , 1991 .

[7]  R Mermelstein,et al.  Irreversible pulmonary changes induced in rat lung by dust overload. , 1992, Environmental health perspectives.

[8]  W. Henderson,et al.  Relative contribution of leukotriene B4 to the neutrophil chemotactic activity produced by the resident human alveolar macrophage. , 1987, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[9]  M. Feldstein,et al.  Pulmonary clearance and hilar lymph node content in rats after particle exposure. , 1978, Environmental research.

[10]  G. Oberdörster,et al.  Particle Induced In vitro Chemotaxis of Alveolar Macrophages (AM) and Neutrophils and In Vivo Effects , 1989 .

[11]  I. Adamson,et al.  Enhanced macrophage-fibroblast interactions in the pulmonary interstitium increases fibrosis after silica injection to monocyte-depleted mice. , 1989, The American journal of pathology.

[12]  American Conference Of Governmental Industrial Hygienists 1998 Ventilation A O , 2019 .

[13]  J. Ferin,et al.  Increased pulmonary toxicity of ultrafine particles? II. Lung lavage studies , 1990 .

[14]  G. Patrick,et al.  The Clearance of Particles of Colloidal Gold from Subpleural Alveoli , 1988 .

[15]  I. Amato Making the Right Stuff , 1989 .

[16]  S. J. Rothenberg,et al.  Toxicity of gallium oxide particles following a 4‐week inhalation exposure , 1988, Journal of applied toxicology : JAT.