The genotoxicity of fullerene C(60) nanoparticles was evaluated in vivo with comet assays using the lung cells of rats given C(60) nanoparticles. The C(60) nanoparticles were intratracheally instilled as a single dose at 0.5 or 2.5mg/kg or repeated dose at 0.1 or 0.5mg/kg, once a week for 5 weeks, to male rats. The lungs were obtained 3 or 24h after a single instillation and 3h after repeated instillation. Inflammatory responses were observed in the lungs obtained 24h after a single instillation at 2.5mg/kg and repeated instillation at 0.5mg/kg. Histopathological examinations revealed that C(60) nanoparticles caused slight changes including hemorrhages in alveoli and the cellular infiltration of macrophages and neutrophils in alveoli. In comet assays using rat lung cells, no increase in % Tail DNA was found in any group given C(60) nanoparticles. These findings indicate that C(60) nanoparticles had no potential for DNA damage in comet assays using the lungs cells of rats given C(60) even at doses causing inflammation.
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