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http://hdl.handle.net/10397/117362
| Title: | Disproportionately higher contribution of endotoxin to PM₂.₅ bioactivity than its mass share highlights the need to identify low-concentration, high-potency components | Authors: | Yu, J Chen, T Han, Y Liu, X Su, J Leung, PHM Kelly, F Ho, KF Qu, G Jin, LN |
Issue Date: | 30-Sep-2025 | Source: | Environmental science & technology, 30 Sept 2025, v. 59, no. 38, p. 20229-20238 | Abstract: | The contribution of microbial components and their sources to the bioactivity of airborne fine particulate matter (PM2.5) remains unclear. This study validated the concentration-additive mixture effects of ambient PM2.5 fractions on in vitro interleukin-8 (IL-8) induction, enabling quantification of the role of endotoxin from Gram-negative bacteria in IL-8 induction by PM2.5 from contrasting environments. Endotoxin consistently contributed to PM2.5-induced IL-8 at both the coastal site (0.1–10%) and the urban site (0.1–17%), far exceeding its mass fraction in PM2.5 (<0.0001%). Among reported components, endotoxin demonstrated the highest toxicity-to-mass contribution ratio (10,000:1–100,000:1) due to its high potency. This suggests that reducing PM2.5 toxicity may not necessarily require a proportional reduction in its mass. The sources of Gram-negative bacteria shifted from predominantly natural origins at the coastal site (natural-to-anthropogenic ratio of 1.6:1) to increasing anthropogenic contributions at the urban site (natural-to-anthropogenic ratio of 0.7:1). These anthropogenic sources, including the built environment, sewage treatment, and humans, fall outside conventional pollution-intensive categories. These findings highlight the importance of identifying high-potency, low-concentration components and their sources. Targeting such components is critical for cost-effective PM2.5 abatement strategies and achieving significant public health benefits, especially in regions with low-to-moderate PM2.5 levels. | Keywords: | Gram-negative bacteria Interleukin-8 Mixture effect Particulate matter Source tracking |
Publisher: | American Chemical Society | Journal: | Environmental science & technology | ISSN: | 0013-936X | EISSN: | 1520-5851 | DOI: | 10.1021/acs.est.5c07255 |
| Appears in Collections: | Journal/Magazine Article |
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