Inhalation exposure to copper may occur during a range of occupational activities and the purpose of this study was to characterise the toxicological response to repeated inhalation of two copper compounds, representative of copper substances in large-scale production/use. Crl:CD(SD) rats were repeatedly exposed to aerosols of dicopper oxide (CuO) or copper sulphate pentahydrate (CuSO.5 HO) for 14-days as part of a range finding study at normalised copper doses of 0.18, 0.71, 1.78 and 8.9 mg/m Cu. Within a 28-days main study (CuO only), animals were repeatedly exposed to 0.2, 0.4, 0.8 and 2.0 mg/m CuO following OECD TG 412. The main study also consisted of satellite groups exposed for 1-, 2- or 3- weeks as well as a 13-week post-exposure recovery period group. Repeated exposure for 14-days to both copper compounds, normalised for copper content, led to an acute influx of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (neutrophils) and macrophages whilst only CuSO.5 HO exposure resulted in epithelial hyperplasia. This differential response may reflect the highly dissolvable nature of CuSO.5 HO in lung lining fluid leading to a release of copper ions at the epithelial surface whilst CuO is relatively indissolvable at neutral pH. In the 28-day study with CuO, an increase in cellularity was also evident in both histological and BALF samples and was dose-related with minimal to mild (neutrophilic) inflammation observed > 0.4 mg/m in the lung tissue sections and significant increases from 0.2 mg/m in BALF. There were no minimal haematological findings, no clinical findings and systemic organs were unaffected by inhalation exposure to dicopper oxide. The lung cellular response was limited to alveolar histiocytosis and neutrophil influx with no evidence of epithelial hyperplasia or fibrosis and all lung biomarkers returned to control levels within the post-exposure recovery period. Interestingly, the satellite groups showed that this acute cellular response followed a biphasic rather than monotonic pattern with a peak in lung biomarkers between weeks 1-3 and reduction thereafter. This reduction in lung biomarkers occurred during continued exposure and may indicate an adaptive response to copper exposure. Overall, these results show that repeated exposure to copper compounds results in an acute cellular response with no associated pathology and which fully resolved after the cessation of exposure. Therefore, the cellular response is evidence of a controlled and adaptive response associated with the removal of CuO from the alveolar surface.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tox.2022.153221DOI Listing

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