Search publications

Reset filters Search by keyword

No publications found.

 

Atmospheric aging of tire rubber antioxidants forms complex mixtures that trigger inflammation in human macrophages

Authors: Peng CLiggio JMoussa SGTang YJohannessen CZhang XZhang ZLi LHarner TSaini AHung HWentzell JWheeler MJDabek-Zlotorzynska EYassine MLiu QTang MFriel-Bartlett ZAbdul-Sater AA


Affiliations

1 Air Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto, Ontario M3H 5T4, Canada; Institute of Atmospheric Environment, Guangdong Provincial Academy of Environmental Science, Guangzhou 510045, China; Joint Lab for Atmospheric Photochemistry, Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Guangzhou 511363, China.
2 Air Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto, Ontario M3H 5T4, Canada. Electronic address: John.Liggio@ec.gc.ca.
3 Air Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto, Ontario M3H 5T4, Canada. Electronic address: Samar.moussa@ec.gc.ca.
4 School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Muscle Health Research Centre, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
5 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec H4B 1R6, Canada.
6 School of Public Health, University of Nevada Reno, Reno, Nevada 89557, United States.
7 Air Quality Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Toronto, Ontario M3H 5T4, Canada.
8 Analysis and Air Quality Section, Air Quality Research Division, Science and Technology Branch, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
9 Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China.
10 State Key Laboratory of Advanced Environmental Technology, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510640, China.
11 School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Muscle Health Research Centre, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address: aasater@yorku.ca.

Description

Antioxidants added to tires to prevent degradation have recently been recognized as emerging environmental contaminants. While their acute aquatic toxicity has raised concern, these compounds are also emitted to the atmosphere and can be associated with particulate matter (PM). On PM they can react heterogeneously with oxidants, producing a range of transformation products (TPs) with unknown impacts to human health via inhalation. Here, we show through laboratory experiments that many previously unrecognized TPs are formed in complex mixtures from both OH radical and ozone heterogeneous reactions of N-(1,3-dimethylbutyl)-N'-phenyl-p-phenylenediamine (6PPD) and N,N'-diphenyl-1,4-phenylenediamine (DPPD). In the presence of nitrogen oxides, 13 TPs incorporated additional nitrogen atoms in the form of potentially toxic nitrosamines and nitramines. Overall, >150 TPs were detected in oxidation experiments, with > 88 also identified in ambient near-road and urban PM samples. When tested in human macrophages, these TP mixtures induced potent inflammatory responses and rapid cell death. The effects consistently exceeded those caused by the parent antioxidants and by the single quinone compound (6PPD-Q), commonly assumed to trigger toxicity, even at total mixture concentrations comparable to those recently measured in human blood serum. These findings suggest that atmospheric processing of tire-wear chemicals produces PM-associated transformation products, which could potentially contribute to an elevated risk of inflammation-driven diseases near roads. The work highlights the importance of evaluating atmospherically derived tire-wear TPs as dynamic, interactive mixtures rather than isolated compounds, particularly as electric vehicles with higher tire wear emissions become more prevalent.


Keywords: 6-PPDInflammationNon-target analysisTire wear antioxidantsTransformation products


Links

PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42191547/

DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2026.110307