Geiser Marianne, Casaulta Marco, Kupferschmid Barbara, Schulz Holger, Semmler-Behnke Manuela, Kreyling Wolfgang
Institute of Anatomy, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 2, CH-3000 Bern 9, Switzerland.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 2008 Mar;38(3):371-6. doi: 10.1165/rcmb.2007-0138OC. Epub 2007 Oct 18.
The role of macrophages in the clearance of particles with diameters less than 100 nm (ultrafine or nanoparticles) is not well established, although these particles deposit highly efficiently in peripheral lungs, where particle phagocytosis by macrophages is the primary clearance mechanism. To investigate the uptake of nanoparticles by lung phagocytes, we analyzed the distribution of titanium dioxide particles of 20 nm count median diameter in macrophages obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage at 1 hour and 24 hours after a 1-hour aerosol inhalation. Differential cell counts revealing greater than 96% macrophages and less than 1% neutrophils and lymphocytes excluded inflammatory cell responses. Employing energy-filtering transmission electron microscopy (EFTEM) for elemental microanalysis, we examined 1,594 macrophage profiles in the 1-hour group (n = 6) and 1,609 in the 24-hour group (n = 6). We found 4 particles in 3 macrophage profiles at 1 hour and 47 particles in 27 macrophage profiles at 24 hours. Model-based data analysis revealed an uptake of 0.06 to 0.12% ultrafine titanium-dioxide particles by lung-surface macrophages within 24 hours. Mean (SD) particle diameters were 31 (8) nm at 1 hour and 34 (10) nm at 24 hours. Particles were localized adjacent (within 13-83 nm) to the membrane in vesicles with mean (SD) diameters of 592 (375) nm at 1 hour and 414 (309) nm at 24 hours, containing other material like surfactant. Additional screening of macrophage profiles by conventional TEM revealed no evidence for agglomerated nanoparticles. These results give evidence for a sporadic and rather unspecific uptake of TiO(2)-nanoparticles by lung-surface macrophages within 24 hours after their deposition, and hence for an insufficient role of the key clearance mechanism in peripheral lungs.
巨噬细胞在清除直径小于100纳米的颗粒(超细颗粒或纳米颗粒)中的作用尚未完全明确,尽管这些颗粒能高效沉积于肺外周,而巨噬细胞对颗粒的吞噬作用是主要的清除机制。为了研究肺吞噬细胞对纳米颗粒的摄取情况,我们分析了在1小时气溶胶吸入后1小时和24小时通过支气管肺泡灌洗获得的巨噬细胞中计数中位直径为20纳米的二氧化钛颗粒的分布。差异细胞计数显示巨噬细胞占比超过96%,中性粒细胞和淋巴细胞占比不到1%,排除了炎症细胞反应。采用能量过滤透射电子显微镜(EFTEM)进行元素微分析,我们在1小时组(n = 6)检查了1594个巨噬细胞形态,在24小时组(n = 6)检查了1609个。我们在1小时时发现3个巨噬细胞形态中有4个颗粒,在24小时时发现27个巨噬细胞形态中有47个颗粒。基于模型的数据分析显示,肺表面巨噬细胞在24小时内摄取了0.06%至0.12%的超细二氧化钛颗粒。1小时时颗粒平均(标准差)直径为31(8)纳米,24小时时为34(10)纳米。颗粒位于与膜相邻(13 - 83纳米内)的囊泡中,1小时时囊泡平均(标准差)直径为592(375)纳米,24小时时为414(309)纳米,囊泡中含有如表面活性剂等其他物质。通过传统透射电子显微镜对巨噬细胞形态进行的额外筛选未发现纳米颗粒团聚的证据。这些结果表明,二氧化钛纳米颗粒在沉积后24小时内被肺表面巨噬细胞以散在且相当非特异性的方式摄取,因此表明外周肺中的关键清除机制作用不足。