Human cell-based in vitro systems to assess respiratory toxicity: a case study using silanes

Author:

Sharma Monita1ORCID,Stucki Andreas O1ORCID,Verstraelen Sandra2,Stedeford Todd J3,Jacobs An2,Maes Frederick2,Poelmans David2,Van Laer Jo2,Remy Sylvie2,Frijns Evelien2,Allen David G4,Clippinger Amy J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. PETA Science Consortium International e.V. , 70499 Stuttgart, Germany

2. Sustainable HEALTH Unit, Flemish Institute for Technological Research (VITO) , BE-2400 Mol, Belgium

3. The Acta Group , Washington, District of Columbia 20037, USA

4. Inotiv, Research Triangle Park , North Carolina 27560, USA

Abstract

Abstract Inhalation is a major route by which human exposure to substances can occur. Resources have therefore been dedicated to optimize human-relevant in vitro approaches that can accurately and efficiently predict the toxicity of inhaled chemicals for robust risk assessment and management. In this study—the IN vitro Systems to PredIct REspiratory toxicity Initiative—2 cell-based systems were used to predict the ability of chemicals to cause portal-of-entry effects on the human respiratory tract. A human bronchial epithelial cell line (BEAS-2B) and a reconstructed human tissue model (MucilAir, Epithelix) were exposed to triethoxysilane (TES) and trimethoxysilane (TMS) as vapor (mixed with N2 gas) at the air-liquid interface. Cell viability, cytotoxicity, and secretion of inflammatory markers were assessed in both cell systems and, for MucilAir tissues, morphology, barrier integrity, cilia beating frequency, and recovery after 7 days were also examined. The results show that both cell systems provide valuable information; the BEAS-2B cells were more sensitive in terms of cell viability and inflammatory markers, whereas MucilAir tissues allowed for the assessment of additional cellular effects and time points. As a proof of concept, the data were also used to calculate human equivalent concentrations. As expected, based on chemical properties and existing data, the silanes demonstrated toxicity in both systems with TMS being generally more toxic than TES. Overall, the results demonstrate that these in vitro test systems can provide valuable information relevant to predicting the likelihood of toxicity following inhalation exposure to chemicals in humans.

Funder

PETA Science Consortium International e.V.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Toxicology

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