Quantitative Assessment of Particulate Matter Biodistribution Using 14C-Nanotracing and Accelerator Mass Spectrometry
- Authors
- Song, Seongeun; Lee, Gwan-Ho; Oh, Min-Seok; Lim, Sungsu; Kim, Yun Kyung; Kim, Youngsoo; Yu, Byung-Yong
- Issue Date
- 2026-01
- Publisher
- American Chemical Society
- Citation
- Environmental Science & Technology
- Abstract
- Particulate matter (PM) poses a major health risk, yet quantifying the biodistribution of inhaled PM at an environmentally relevant concentration remains analytically challenging. Here, we developed a 14C-nanotracing platform integrated with accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) to achieve subpicogram sensitivity for organ-level quantification of inhaled PM. 14C-labeled black carbon PM was generated via pyrolysis of 14C-n-hexane and introduced into a controlled inhalation chamber. ICR mice (n = 7) were exposed to short-intense (1 h, high concentration) and long-mild (3 h day–1 for 7 days, low concentration) protocols to represent acute and subchronic exposure conditions. Quantitative AMS analysis revealed systemic translocation of carbonaceous PM, with organ burdens following the order lung > liver > kidney > brain. After short-term exposure, 360 pg accumulated in the liver, 120 pg in the kidney, and 4.8 pg in brain tissue, whereas prolonged exposure increased these burdens by 3–6-fold, reaching 15 pg in the brain. These findings indicate substantial retention of PM across multiple organs including neural tissues of the brain. This 14C-nanotracing approach enables a quantitative framework for linking inhaled PM exposure to systemic burden, supporting toxicokinetic modeling and evidence-based air quality regulation.
- ISSN
- 0013-936X
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/154001
- DOI
- 10.1021/acs.est.5c11834
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2026
- Export
- RIS (EndNote)
- XLS (Excel)
- XML
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.