Review of Health Effects of Automotive Brake and Tyre Wear Particles
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Methodology
2.2. Methods of Toxicological Studies
- Reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are chemically reactive molecules containing oxygen often generated in response to environmental stressors.
- Interleukine-8 (IL-8), which is a cytokine (protein) produced by different cells in the body including immune cells and involved in the regulation of inflammation and the immune response.
- Tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), which is a cytokine (protein) produced by immune cells (macrophages, monocytes, etc.) and involved in the regulation of inflammation and the immune response.
2.3. Methods for Brake Sample Collection
- Brake bench dynamometer.
- Box around brakes.
- Brake drum or brake lining of vehicles.
- Room filter of brake bench dynamometer installation.
- Grinding of brake pads.
2.4. Methods for Tyre Sample Collection
- Laboratory road simulator.
- Cryo-milling or cryo-fracturing of tyres.
- Grinding, shredding, or scraping of tyres.
- Pre-made crumb rubber (with unknown grinding technique).
3. Results
3.1. Brakes
3.2. Tyres
3.2.1. Human/Mammalian
3.2.2. Aquatic
3.2.3. Terrestrial Invertebrates
3.3. Species
3.4. Non-Exhaust vs. Other Particles
3.5. Samples
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
3D | Three-dimensional |
6PPD | N-(1,3-dimethylbutyl)-N′-phenyl-1,4-phenylenediamine |
6PPDQ | 6PPD quinone |
ABC | ATP binding cassette |
ABS | Stone mastic asphalt |
ABT | Asphalt concrete |
AChE | Acetyl-cholinesterase |
ALP | Alkaline phosphatase |
ALT | Alanine aminotransferase |
ARG | Antibiotic-resistant gene |
AST | Aspartate aminotransferase |
ATP | Adenosine triphosphate |
BALF | Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid |
BPA | Bisphenol A |
BPAF | Bisphenol AF |
BPF | Bisphenol F |
BPS | Bisphenol S |
BT | Benzothiazole |
Car | Carotenoids |
CAT | Catalase |
CAV-1 | Caveolin-1 |
CD55 | Lipid raft marker |
Chla | Chlorophyll a |
DCFH-DA | 2′7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate |
DEGs | Differentially expressed genes |
DFO | Deferoxamine |
DFX | Deferoxamine mesylate |
DNA | Deoxyribonucleic acid |
DPG | 1,3-diphenylguanidine |
DRM | Detergent-resistant membrane |
DTBBA | Dithiobisbenzanilide |
EC50 | 50% effect concentration |
ECE | Economic Commission for Europe |
EDTA | Ethylene diammine tetra acetic acid |
EPFRs | Environmentally persistent free radicals |
EU | European Union |
FETAX | Frog embryo teratogenesis assay—Xenopus |
FLOT-1 | Flottilin-1 |
FTIR | Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy |
GGT | γ -glutamyl transpeptidase |
GO | Gene ontology |
GPx | Glutathione peroxidase |
GSH | Glutathione |
GST | Glutathione S-transferase |
hAO | Human airway organoid |
HO-1 | Heme oxygenase-1 |
Hsp70 | Heat shock protein 70 |
IL-8 | Interleukine-8 |
LC50 | Lethal concentration for 50% of the test subjects |
LDH | Lactate dehydrogenase |
LM | Low-metallic |
LMS | Lysosomal membrane stability |
LOEC | Lowest observed effect concentration |
MBT | 2-mercaptobenzothiazole |
MDA | Malondialdehyde |
MDDC | Monocyte-derived dendritic cell |
MDM | Monocyte-derived macrophage |
MEF | Membrane-enriched fraction |
MIP-2 | Macrophage inflammatory protein-2 |
MMI | Methimazole |
mRNA | Messenger ribonucleic acid |
MTT | 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide |
NAG | β-N-acetylglucosaminidase |
NAO | Non-asbestos organic |
NO | Nitrogen oxide |
NOEC | Non-observable effect concentration |
OECD | Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development |
PAHs | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons |
PEF | Peak expiratory flow |
PET | Polyethylene terephthalate |
PM | Particulate matter |
PMN | Polymorphonuclear neutrophilic leukocyte |
PVC | Polyvinyl chloride |
ROS | Reactive oxygen species |
SOD | Superoxide dismutase |
SM | Semi-metallic |
TBARSs | Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances |
TC50 | Teratogenic concentration for 50% of a test species |
TIE | Toxicity identification evaluation |
TNF-α | Tumour necrosis factor alpha |
TOF-MS | Time-of-flight mass spectrometry |
TPs | Tyre particles |
TPO | Thyroid peroxidase |
TRWPs | Tyre and road wear particles |
TWPs | Tyre wear particles |
USA | United States of America |
UV | Ultraviolet |
VACES | Versatile ambient concentration enrichment system |
VTI | Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute |
WHO | World Health Organization |
Appendix A
Appendix A.1. Brakes
Appendix A.1.1. Human/Mammalian
- 2009: Wear Mechanism in Automotive Brake Materials, Wear Debris and its Potential Environmental Impact [52].
- 2009: Toxic Effects of Brake Wear Particles on Epithelial Lung Cells In-Vitro [49].
- 2015: Physico-Chemical Characterization and Oxidative Reactivity Evaluation of Aged Brake Wear Particles [50].
- 2015: Evaluation of the Fate and Pathological Response in the Lung and Pleura of Brake Dust Alone and in Combination with Added Chrysotile Compared to Crocidolite Asbestos Following Short-Term Inhalation Exposure [53].
- 2016: Automotive Airborne Brake Wear Debris Nanoparticles and Cytokinesis-Block Micronucleus Assay in Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes: A Pilot Study [47].
- 2016: Toxicity and Mutagenicity of Low-Metallic (LM) Automotive Brake Pad Materials [46].
- 2018: Evaluation of the Dose-Response and Fate in the Lung and Pleura of Chrysotile-Containing Brake Dust Compared to Chrysotile or Crocidolite Asbestos in a 28-Day Quantitative Inhalation Toxicology Study [54].
- 2018: Biological Response of an In-Vitro Human 3D Lung Cell Model Exposed to Brake Wear Debris Varies Based on Brake Pad Formulation [87].
- 2018: Brake Wear (Nano)Particle Characterization and Toxicity on Airway Epithelial Cells In-Vitro [88].
- 2019: Inhalation Toxicity Profiles of Particulate Matter: A Comparison Between Brake Wear With Other Sources of Emission [80].
- 2020: Brake Dust Exposure Exacerbates Inflammation and Transiently Compromises Phagocytosis in Macrophages [51].
- 2020: Copper-Dependent Biological Effects of Particulate Matter Produced by Brake Systems on Lung Alveolar Cells [59].
- 2021: Final Results from a 90-day Quantitative Inhalation Toxicology Study Evaluating the Dose-Response and Fate in the Lung and Pleura of Chrysotile-Containing Brake Dust Compared to TiO2, Chrysotile, Crocidolite or Amosite Asbestos: Histopathological Examination, Confocal Microscopy and Collagen Quantification of the Lung and Pleural Cavity [55].
- 2023: Effects of Particle-Bound Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Plasticisers from Different Traffic Sources on the Human Alveolar Epithelial Cell Line A549 [48].
- 2023: Effects of Brake Wear Nanoparticles on the Protection and Repair Functions of The Airway Epithelium [89].
- 2023: Toxicological Profile of PM from Different Sources in the Bronchial Epithelial Cell Line BEAS-2B [58].
Appendix A.1.2. Aquatic
- 2017: In-vivo Assessment of the Genotoxic and Oxidative Stress Effects of Particulate Matter on Echinogammarus veneris [81].
Appendix A.2. Tyres
- Human/mammalian;
- Aquatic;
- Terrestrial.
Appendix A.2.1. Human/Mammalian
- 2005: Impact of Tire Debris on In-Vitro and In-Vivo Systems [90].
- 2005: Toxicity of Tire Debris Extracts on Human Lung Cell Line A549 [56].
- 2006: Exposure to Wear Particles Generated from Studded Tires and Pavement Induces Inflammatory Cytokine Release from Human Macrophages [66].
- 2006: Comparison of Genotoxic and Inflammatory Effects of Particles Generated by Wood Combustion, a Road Simulator and Collected from Street and Subway [82].
- 2007: Wear Particles Generated from Studded Tires and Pavement Induces Inflammatory Reactions in Mouse Macrophage Cells [67].
- 2007: Organic Extract of Tire Debris Causes Localized Damage in the Plasma Membrane of Human Lung Epithelial Cells [63].
- 2008: Organic Compounds in Tire Particle Induce Reactive Oxygen Species and Heat-Shock Proteins in the Human Alveolar Cell Line A549 [91].
- 2008: Properties and Toxicological Effects of Particles from the Interaction Between Tyres, Road Pavement and Winter Traction Material [68].
- 2008: Mechanisms Related to the Genotoxicity of Particles in the Subway and from Other Sources [60].
- 2008: Cardiopulmonary Responses of Intratracheally Instilled Tire Particles and Constituent Metal Components [43].
- 2009: Lung Toxicity Induced by Intratracheal Instillation of Size-Fractionated Tire Particles [44].
- 2010: Comparative Acute Lung Inflammation Induced by Atmospheric PM and Size-Fractionated Tire Particles [45].
- 2011: Wear Particles from Studded Tires and Granite Pavement Induce Pro-inflammatory Alterations in Human Monocyte-Derived Macrophages: A Proteomic Study [92].
- 2012: Evaluation of Potential for Toxicity from Subacute Inhalation of Tire and Road Wear Particles in Rats [57].
- 2019: Exposure to Particle Debris Generated from Passenger and Truck Tires Induces Different Genotoxicity and Inflammatory Responses in the RAW 264.7 Cell Line [93].
- 2020: A Novel 3D Intestine Barrier Model to Study the Immune Response Upon Exposure to Microplastics [61].
- 2021: In-Vitro Assessment Reveals the Effects of Environmentally Persistent Free Radicals on the Toxicity of Photoaged Tire Wear Particles [94].
- 2022: Mutagenicity of PM10-bound PAHs from Non-Exhaust Sources [62].
- 2022: Inhaled Tire-Wear Microplastic Particles Induced Pulmonary Fibrotic Injury via Epithelial Cytoskeleton Rearrangement [95].
- 2023: Human Airway Organoids as 3D In-Vitro Models for a Toxicity Assessment of Emerging Inhaled Pollutants: Tire Wear Particles [69].
- 2023: Particle Debris Generated from Passenger Tires Induces Morphological and Gene Expression Alterations in the Macrophages Cell Line RAW 264.7 [64].
- 2023: Oral Exposure to Tire Rubber-Derived Contaminant 6PPD and 6PPD Quinone Induce Hepatotoxicity in Mice [70].
- 2023: Four-Week Repeated Exposure to Tire-Derived 6PPD Quinone Causes Multiple Organ Injury in Male BALB/c Mice [71].
- 2024: Exposure of RAW264.7 Macrophages to Exhaust Emissions (Gases And PAH) and Non-Exhaust Emissions (Tire Particles) Induces Additive or Synergistic TNF-A Production Depending on the Tire Particle Size [96].
- 2024: An In-Vitro Comparison of the Toxicological Profiles of Ground Tire Particles (TP) and Actual Tire and Road Wear Particles (TRWP) Emissions [65].
Appendix A.2.2. Aquatic
- 2005: Toxicity of Tire Debris Leachates [56].
- 2007: Tire Debris Organic Extract Affects Xenopus Development [97].
- 2009: Impacts of Weathered Tire Debris on the Development of Rana sylvatica Larvae [98].
- 2009: Toxicity Assessment of Sequential Leachates of Tire Powder Using a Battery of Toxicity Tests and Toxicity Identification Evaluations [99].
- 2010: Toxicity of Tire Wear Particle Leachate to the Marine Macroalga, Ulva lactuca [100].
- 2011: Acute Aquatic Toxicity of Tire and Road Wear Particles to Alga, Daphnid, and Fish [101].
- 2013: Chronic Toxicity of Tire and Road Wear Particles to Water- and Sediment-Dwelling Organisms [102].
- 2018: Ingestion and Chronic Effects of Car Tire Tread Particles on Freshwater Benthic Macroinvertebrates [73].
- 2019: Acute and Long-Term Toxicity of Micronized Car Tire Wear Particles to Hyalella azteca [103].
- 2020: Chemical Composition and Ecotoxicity of Plastic and Car Tire Rubber Leachates to Aquatic Organisms [83].
- 2020: Increased Temperature and Turbulence Alter the Effects of Leachates from Tire Particles on Fathead Minnow (Pimephales promelas) [77].
- 2020: Toxicological effects of micronized tire crumb rubber on mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus) and fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas) [104].
- 2021: Tire Wear Particle and Leachate Exposures from a Pristine and Road-Worn Tire to Hyalella azteca: Comparison of Chemical Content and Biological Effects [105].
- 2021: Treading Water: Tire Wear Particle Leachate Recreates an Urban Runoff Mortality Syndrome in Coho but Not Chum Salmon [76].
- 2021: Altered Gene Expression in Chironomus Riparius (Insecta) in Response to Tire Rubber and Polystyrene Microplastics [84].
- 2022: PET Particles Raise Microbiological Concerns for Human Health While Tyre Wear Microplastic Particles Potentially Affect Ecosystem Services in Waters [85].
- 2022: Internalization, Reduced Growth, and Behavioral Effects Following Exposure to Micro and Nano Tire Particles in Two Estuarine Indicator Species [106].
- 2022: Toxicity of Micro and Nano Tire Particles and Leachate for Model Freshwater Organisms [107].
- 2022: Toxicological Effects of 6PPD and 6PPD Quinone in Zebrafish Larvae [108].
- 2022: Chronic Toxicity of Tire Crumb Rubber Particles to Mummichog (Fundulus heteroclitus) in Episodic Exposures [109].
- 2022: Ecological Impact of End-of-Life-Tire (ELT)-Derived Rubbers: Acute and Chronic Effects at Organism and Population Levels [110].
- 2022: Effects of Polyester Fibers and Car Tire Particles on Freshwater Invertebrates [86].
- 2022: Phenotypic Toxicity, Oxidative Response, and Transcriptomic Deregulation of the Rotifer Brachionus plicatilis Exposed to a Toxic Cocktail of Tire-Wear Particle Leachate [111].
- 2022: Toxicity of Tire Rubber Microplastics to Freshwater Sediment Organisms [74].
- 2022: Tyre Particle Exposure Affects the Health of Two Key Estuarine Invertebrates [112].
- 2022: Acute Toxicity of Tire Wear Particles, Leachates and Toxicity Identification Evaluation of Leachates to the Marine Copepod, Tigriopus japonicas [113].
- 2023: Toxicity of 6PPD Quinone to Four Freshwater Invertebrate Species [75].
- 2023: Toxicological Effects of Tire Rubber-Derived 6PPD Quinone, a Species-Specific Toxicant, and Dithiobisbenzanilide (DTBBA) in the Marine Rotifer Brachionus koreanus [114].
- 2024: Aging Increases the Particulate- and Leachate-Induced Toxicity of Tire Wear Particles to Microalgae [78].
- 2024: A Ubiquitous Tire Rubber Additive Induced Serious Eye Injury in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) [115].
- 2024: Combined Toxicity of Pristine (p-) or Artificially Aged (a-) Tire Wear Particles (TWP) and Bisphenols to Tigriopus japonicus [116].
- 2024: Cocktail Effects of Tire Wear Particles Leachates on Diverse Biological Models: A Multilevel Analysis [117].
- 2024: Accumulation and Depuration of Tire Wear Particles in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) and Toxic Effects on Gill, Liver, and Gut [118].
Appendix A.2.3. Terrestrial
- 2011: Effects of Crumb Rubber Waste as a Soil Conditioner on the Nematode Assemblage in a Turfgrass Soil [119].
- 2018: Exposure to Aged Crumb Rubber Reduces Survival Time During a Stress Test in Earthworms (Eisenia fetida) [120].
- 2020: Dysbiosis in the Gut Microbiota of Soil Fauna Explains the Toxicity of Tire Tread Particles [121].
- 2021: Ecotoxicological Effects of Micronized Car Tire Wear Particles and their Heavy Metals on the Earthworm (Eisenia fetida) in Soil [122].
- 2021: Exploring the Impacts of Microplastics and Associated Chemicals in the Terrestrial Environment—Exposure of Soil Invertebrates to Tire Particles [123].
- 2021: Exposure to Heavy Metal and Antibiotic Enriches Antibiotic Resistant Genes on the Tire Particles in Soil [124].
- 2021: The Influence of Microplastics from Ground Tyres on the Acute, Subchronical Toxicity and Microbial Respiration of Soil [125].
- 2021: Time-Dependent Toxicity of Tire Particles on Soil Nematodes [126].
- 2022: Time-Dependent Immune Response in Porcellio Scaber Following Exposure to Microplastics and Natural Particles [127].
- 2022: Toxicity Assessment of Tire Particles Released from Personal Mobilities (Bicycles, Cars, and Electric Scooters) on Soil Organisms [128].
- 2022: Two Types of Microplastics (Polystyrene-HBCD and car Tire Abrasion) Affect Oxidative Stress-Related Biomarkers in Earthworm Eisenia andrei in a Time-Dependent Manner [129].
- 2023: Modulation of Chlorpyrifos Toxicity to Soil Arthropods by Simultaneous Exposure to Polyester Microfibers or Tire Particle Microplastics [130].
- 2023: Toxic and Biodegradation Potential of Waste Tires for Microorganisms Based on Two Experimental Designs [131].
- 2023: Exposure to 6-PPD Quinone at Environmentally Relevant Concentrations Causes Abnormal Locomotion Behaviors and Neurodegeneration in Caenorhabditis elegans [132].
(a) | ||||||
Year | Ref. | Source | Parameters Examined | Testing Conditions | Main Conclusions | |
2009 | [52] | Prototype SM brake pad material emulating LM European brake system. | Brake wear debris (non-airborne) and ball-milled dust in vitro mutagenic potency and in vivo pulmonary toxicity via different types of assays. | Laboratory brake wear sampling (non-airborne dust) on a brake dyno in A04D wear test. Brake temperature up to 500 °C. | Brake wear debris proved toxic to E. coli strain after metabolic activation (Cu). No other significant biological effects were observed. Not clear if the prototype pads are representative of real-world commercial brakes. | |
2009 | [49] | Brake system of one vehicle—does not specify what kind of vehicle or the brake type. | Brake wear particles and debris in vitro toxicological effects on epithelial lung cells. | Enclosed chamber with direct exposure of the cells to freshly generated brake dust. Two braking protocols were applied. | Increase in oxidative stress and pro-inflammatory response in lung cells was observed with fresh brake particles. No cytotoxicity or cell morphology deterioration. | |
2015 | [50] | Different drum brakes from passenger cars. Mixed brake dust samples of light-duty brakes. | Brake wear debris and aged dust ability to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS). | Deposited dust on the drum brakes of various light-duty vehicles. Representative of urban driving and high-speed braking. | Aged brake wear particles are not extremely potent in forming ROS. | |
2015 | [53] | Brake dust alone and in combination with added chrysotile and crocidolite asbestos. | Fate and pathological response in the lung and pleura of brake dust following short-term inhalation exposure in vivo. | Grinding of chrysotile-containing brake drums. | The crocidolite asbestos fibres were persistent through the lifetime and produced an inflammatory response in the lung, whereas the brake dust alone and brake dust with chrysotile samples were biosoluble and caused no significant pathological response. | |
2016 | [47] | Prototype SM brake pad material emulating LM European brake system. | Brake airborne PM in vitro genotoxicity assay in human peripheral lymphocyte cells. | Laboratory brake wear sampling on a brake dyno with AK-Master. Brake temperatures up to 550 °C result in high particle number. | Exposure to brake particles has an impact on DNA damage of lymphocytes. Presence of crystalline metal is considered relevant. Not clear if the prototype pads are representative of real-world commercial brakes. | |
2016 | [46] | Prototype SM brake pad material emulating LM European brake system—two commercial brake systems were also ball-milled. | Brake wear debris (non-airborne) in vitro toxicity and mutagenicity via different types of assays. | Laboratory brake wear sampling (non-airborne dust) on a brake dyno with A04D wear test. Brake temperature up to 500 °C. | The non-airborne debris of the model material contained compounds with toxic and mutagenic properties. Not clear if the prototype pads are representative of real-world commercial brakes. | |
2018 | [54] | Chrysotile-containing brake dust and chrysotile or crocidolite asbestos. | Dose–response and fate in the lung and pleura of brake dust in a 28-day in vivo quantitative inhalation toxicology study. | Grinding of brake shoes. | Chrysotile samples caused a slight inflammatory response, but the fibres were able to be cleared by alveolar macrophage clearance. The crocidolite fibres were not able to be cleared, and they caused a significant inflammatory response and mesothelial pathology. The brake dust samples showed no significant pathological response. | |
2018 | [87] | Different types of brake systems (different pads) used in passenger cars. | Brake PM and dust in vitro toxicity in human epithelial and primary immune cells. | Laboratory brake dust sampling on a brake dyno under urban driving conditions. High brake temperatures were observed up to 500 °C. | Airborne LM brakes do not induce any adverse biological effects in the in vitro lung multicellular model. Bigger particles from NAO brakes caused inflammatory responses and affected cell viability and morphology. Presence of TiO2 is considered relevant. | |
2018 | [88] | Different types of brakes mounted on light-duty vehicles and tested on a brake dynamometer. | In vitro toxicity of brake wear debris, aged dust, and nanoparticles in the respiratory epithelium. | Deposited dust on the wheel parts of light-duty vehicles and a brake dynamometer. | Short-term loss of viability but with limited pro-inflammatory effects. Cytotoxicity of brake wear seems to be particle-size-independent. Substantial amount of nanoparticles with metallic content is considered relevant. | |
2019 | [80] | Different brake systems (LM, SM, NAO, hybrid pads) and studded tyres. | Brake and tyre PM2.5 in vivo toxicity through exposure in mice. | Lab for both sources. PM2.5 sampling on a brake dyno. Unrealistic highway testing sequence—tyre wear particles on a road simulator under normal driving conditions (speed of 70 km/h). | No significant responses observed. No cytotoxicity or oxidative stress was observed. Different potency to induce inflammatory responses by the different types of brakes. | |
2020 | [51] | Mixed brake dust samples from different types of drum brakes of heavy-duty vehicles. | Brake wear debris and aged dust in vitro toxicity in human airways through exposure to airway macrophages. | Deposited dust on the drum brakes of various heavy-duty vehicles. Representative of urban driving and high-speed braking. | Similar toxicological profiles of brake and diesel samples. Both trigger cytokine secretion, impair phagocytic capacity, and disrupt mitochondrial integrity. The metal content of brake dust is considered relevant. | |
2020 | [59] | Four different brake pad/disc systems of light-duty vehicles. | Brake wear PM2.5 in vitro biological impacts. | Brake dynamometer under realistic driving/braking conditions. | PM2.5 with higher Cu induced cell toxicity that correlated with Cu concentration. | |
2021 | [55] | Chrysotile-containing brake dust compared to TiO2, chrysotile, crocidolite, or amosite asbestos. | Dose–response and fate in the lung and pleura in a 90-day in vivo quantitative inhalation toxicology study. | Grinding of brake shoes. | Brake dust and chrysotile showed no significant pathological or tumourigenic response; however, crocidolite and amosite showed inflammation, microgranulomas, persistent fibrosis, and a dose-related lung tumour response. | |
2023 | [48] | Different types of brake systems (different pads including LM, SM, and NAO pads). | In vitro cytotoxicity of brake wear PM10-bound PAHs and plasticisers in human alveolar epithelium cells. | Laboratory brake wear sampling on a brake dyno with one severe and two milder braking protocols. Brake temperature up to 550 °C over the severe cycle. | Brake PM from low-steel, high-steel, and non-asbestos organic brake pads decreases cell viability. No increase in intracellular ROS and no cell cycle arrest were observed. | |
2023 | [89] | Different types of brakes mounted on light-duty vehicles and tested on a brake dynamometer. | In vitro toxicity of brake wear debris, aged dust, and nanoparticles in the respiratory epithelium. | Deposited dust on the wheel parts of light-duty vehicles and a brake dynamometer. | Brake wear nanoparticles do not cause overt cytotoxicity and inflammation. They can translocate through the epithelial barrier and increase mucus production. Indication of acute inflammation and potential for chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases. | |
2023 | [58] | Different types of brake systems of 3 vehicles. | In vitro toxicity of unspecified brake dust sample of up to 50 μm in a bronchial epithelial cell line. | Brush deposited dust from the brake discs of 3 vehicles. Very high Cd concentrations indicate use of old brake linings. | Brake dust demonstrates cytotoxicity and a significant secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-8. Negative effects were attributed to Cu and Cd. No oxidative stress was noted. | |
(b) | ||||||
Year | Ref. | Source | Species | Parameters Examined | Testing Conditions | Main Conclusions |
2017 | [81] | Brake system of three vehicles. | Echinogammarus Veneris (amphipod crustaceans). | In vivo assessment of the genotoxic and oxidative stress effects of brake wear debris on Echinogammarus veneris. | Collected from the brake linings of three different vehicles after use. | Brake dust was shown to cause less genotoxic damage than the natural dusts. Oxidative stress was demonstrated for brake dust. |
(a) | ||||||
Year | Ref. | Source | Parameters Examined | Testing Conditions | Main Conclusions | |
2005 | [90] | Tyre debris eluates and organic extracts. | Tyre debris toxicity in A549 human alveolar cells and HepG2 human liver cells in vitro and in X. laevis embryos in vivo. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of tyre scraps. | Dose-dependent increase in DNA damage and decreased cell proliferation. Morphological changes. Time-dependent increase in Zn in HepG2 cells. Increased mortality rate in X. laevis embryos and malformed larvae. | |
2005 | [56] | Tyre debris organic extracts. | Tyre debris cytotoxicity in A549 human alveolar cells. | Laboratory by rotating a new tyre against a steel brush. | Dose- and time-dependent inhibitory effect on the reduction of MTT and dose-dependent increase in cell mortality and DNA strand breakage. Multiple structural alterations. | |
2006 | [66] | Studded tyre wear PM10 across two different pavements compared to other sources. | Studded tyre wear particle inflammatory response in human macrophages and nasal and bronchial epithelial cells. | VTI road simulator using studded tyres and two types of pavements: dense asphalt with granite and stone mastic asphalt with quartzite. | Granite pavement caused a higher cytokine release compared to quartzite. Tyre particles caused a higher decrease in cell viability compared to street and subway particles. None of the samples caused a cytokine release from nasal epithelial cells. | |
2006 | [82] | Tyre–road wear particles compared to other sources (studded and winter tyres). | Genotoxicity of studded tyre–road wear particles in A549 human alveolar cells. | VTI road simulator using 1 studded tyre on ABT pavement, 2 studded tyres on ABS pavement, and 1 friction (winter) tyre on sanded ABS pavement. | All particles were able to cause DNA damage; however, winter tyres on sanded ABS pavement caused significantly higher DNA damage. Studded tyres on ABT pavement caused an increase in IL-8 and TNF-α, and studded tyres on ABS pavement caused an increase in IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α. | |
2007 | [67] | Studded tyre wear PM10 across two different pavements compared to other sources. | Studded tyre wear particle inflammatory effects on mouse macrophage cells. | VTI road simulator using studded tyres and two types of pavements: dense asphalt with granite and stone mastic asphalt with quartzite. | All particles were able to induce cytokine release. Granite caused much higher release of TNF-α and IL-6 compared to quartzite. Both granite and quartzite induced similar lipid peroxidation and ROS formation, but only granite induced NO production. | |
2007 | [63] | Tyre debris organic extracts. | Tyre debris cytotoxicity in A549 human alveolar cells. | Laboratory by rotating a new tyre against a steel brush. | Dose-dependent increase in % of Trypan Blue-positive cells. Time- and dose-dependent increase in LDH and lipid microdomains. No difference in cell proteins. Twenty-fold increase in HO-1 content in DRM. Increase in invaginations but no other morphological differences. | |
2008 | [91] | Tyre debris organic extracts. | Tyre debris toxicity in A549 human alveolar cells (ROS production and Hsp 70 expression). | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of a new tyre. | Significant dose-dependent ROS production. Higher Hsp70 expression with higher exposure times and lower doses. | |
2008 | [68] | 7 combinations of tyres, pavements, and traction materials compared to other sources. | Tyre wear particle toxicological effects on human monocytes. | VTI road simulator using studded tyres, non-studded winter tyres, ABT with granite, ABS with quartzite, no traction material, crushed stone as traction material, and natural sand as traction material. | All particles were able to induce a cytokine release. Granite caused much higher release of TNF-α, IL-8, and IL-6 compared to quartzite. | |
2008 | [60] | Studded tyre–road wear particles compared to other sources. | Studded tyre–road wear particle genotoxicity through in vitro experiments on human lung epithelial cells. | VTI road simulator using studded tyres and ABT pavement. | Tyre–road samples caused the least amount of mitochondrial depolarisation (37%) and showed almost no increase in ROS. | |
2008 | [43] | Tyre particles and metals (Zn and Cu). | Tyre particle cardiopulmonary toxicity in mice through intratracheal installations. | Laboratory by grinding fresh tyre material (recycled styrene butadiene rubber) and 2 tyre scrap samples. | There was a higher increase in total lavageable cells in the scrap sample. The Zn + Cu sample caused a much higher effect compared to the individual metals. All samples increased BALF lung injury markers and decreased mitochondrial aconitase activity. | |
2009 | [44] | Tyre wear particles, PM2.5 and PM10. | (Size-fractioned) Tyre particle lung toxicity in mice (in vivo through intratracheal instillation). | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of tyre scraps. | PM2.5 showed stronger cytotoxic effects, although PM10 did show some cytotoxicity at higher doses. PM2.5 was more dispersed in alveolar spaces and was not able to be cleared out. | |
2010 | [45] | Tyre wear particles, PM2.5 and PM10, compared to other sources. | (Size-fractioned) Tyre particle lung toxicity in mice (in vivo through intratracheal instillation). | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of tyre scraps. | TP2.5 reached the alveolar spaces and caused an acute inflammatory response, whereas TP10 reached bronchial spaces and did not cause a significant response. | |
2011 | [92] | Studded tyre wear, PM10. | Tyre wear particles’ toxicology through protein release from human macrophages after TWP and ETX exposure. | VTI road simulator using studded tyres and dense asphalt pavement with granite. | TWP exposure: 7 down-regulated and 3 up-regulated proteins. Proteins involved in inflammatory response were up-regulated, and proteins involved in cellular functions were down-regulated. ETX exposure: 4 down-regulated and 2 up-regulated. | |
2012 | [57] | Tyre and road wear particles. | Tyre wear particle lung toxicology through in vivo inhalation in rats. | Laboratory drum testing system with asphalt pavement using 1 summer silica tyre, 1 winter silica tyre, 1 carbon-black tyre. | No general toxicity, cytotoxicity, or inflammatory potential was observed. A few focal areas of subacute inflammatory cell infiltration were observed at higher doses. | |
2019 | [93] | Truck and passenger tyre wear particles. | Tyre wear particles’ genotoxicity in mice macrophage RAW264.7 cells. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of a passenger tyre and a truck tyre. | Both samples caused a reduction in cell viability, decrease in metabolic activity, and increase in TNF-α. Truck tyres overall caused less toxicity than passenger tyres. | |
2020 | [61] | Microplastics from polymer pellets and truck tyre materials. | Polymer and tyre microplastic ingestion toxicity in vitro through a 3D intestinal model. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of polymer pallets and tyre materials. | No significant cytotoxicity or release of pro-inflammatory cytokines was observed. There was no change in the barrier integrity of the co-cultures. | |
2022 | [94] | Photoaged tyre wear particles (environmentally persistent free radicals). | Photoaged tyre wear particles’ toxicology through in vitro experiments on mice macrophages. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of tyre scraps. | TWPs caused a decrease in cell viability and an increase in ROS generation and mRNA levels for inflammatory factors. The toxicological effects were stronger with higher irradiation time suggesting that free radicals play a role. | |
2022 | [62] | Road dust and tyre wear particles’ organic extract (PAHs). | Road dust mutagenicity with bacterial assays (Ames test). | VTI road simulator using 2 different summer tyres and with in situ resuspension chambers in 2 cities. | No mutagenic response was observed, although the testing conditions were not satisfactory, so the results are not reliable. | |
2022 | [95] | Tyre wear microplastic particles. | Tyre wear particle lung toxicology through in vivo inhalation in mice. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of a tyre. | TWP exposure caused restricted ventilatory dysfunction and fibrotic pathological response in mice. Major histopathological changes were observed in the lungs consistent with pulmonary fibrosis. Cytoskeleton rearrangement and cell migration were observed in vitro. | |
2023 | [69] | Tyre wear particles. | Tyre wear particle lung toxicity through a 3D in vitro model of human airway organoids. | Laboratory through cryo-fracturing of a tyre. | TWPs induced significant cytotoxicity and ROS generation and increased cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6. Particles were found inside the cells and clustered around the cells. The exposed hAOs decreased in size. TWPs caused an increase in early and late apoptotic cells. | |
2023 | [64] | Tyre wear particles. | Tyre wear particles’ toxicity in mice macrophage RAW264.7 cells. | Laboratory on-road simulator and then cryo-milled. | There was no sign of DNA damage, and toxicological responses were only observed after prolonged stress and high concentrations in the proliferation study, the gene expressions, and the immunoblot analysis. | |
2023 | [70] | 6PPD and 6PPDQ. | 6PPD and 6PPDQ hepatotoxicity in mice in vivo. | - | Both substances were found to bioaccumulate in the liver in a dose-dependent manner. Higher doses increased the liver’s weight and the triglyceride levels. The hepatic metabolism and immune response were altered. | |
2023 | [71] | 6PPDQ. | 6PPDQ toxicology in vivo in mice through intraperitoneal injections. | - | In the single-injected mice, there were no significant changes in organ indexes or biochemical parameters, and no pathological changes were observed. Repeated injections caused many changes in organ indexes. Significant pathological changes occurred in the organs. The biochemical parameters for the liver and kidney were significantly up-regulated, and there was 6PPDQ accumulation in the liver and lungs. | |
2024 | [96] | Combined exhaust gases, benzo[a]pyrene, and tyre particles. | Combined emissions’ toxicity in mice cell macrophages in vitro. | Laboratory by cryo-grinding commercial tyres. | No cytotoxicity or ROS production. B[a]P caused an inflammatory response, and tyre particles caused a size-dependent response; exhaust gases did not. For the larger particles, there was a disproportionate increase in TNF-α production, suggesting a synergistic effect. | |
2024 | [65] | Ground tyre particles and actual tyre and road wear particles. | In vitro toxicity of ground TP and actual TRWP emissions in mice cells. | TPs: cryogenic grinding of a tyre. TRWPs: on-road sample collection from a vehicle. | No cytotoxicity or oxidative stress. Both particles induced a concentration-dependent proinflammatory response, but the TNF-α production was slightly higher for TRWPs. | |
(b) | ||||||
Year | Ref. | Source | Species | Parameters Examined | Testing Conditions | Main Conclusions |
2005 | [56] | Tyre debris leachates. | R. subcapitata (microalga), D. magna (crustacean), and X. laevis (frog, amphibian). | Tyre debris leachates’ toxicity in vivo and in vitro (FETAX) in aquatic organisms. | Laboratory by rotating a new tyre against a steel brush. | The results showed strong dose-dependent growth inhibition in R. subcapitata and death rate in D. manga and X. laevis. |
2007 | [97] | Tyre debris organic extracts. | Xenopus (frog). | Tyre debris organic extracts’ embryotoxicity in frogs (FETAX test). | Laboratory by cryo-fracturing tyre scraps. | The NOEC was at 50 mg/L, mortality and percentage of malformed larvae was increased at 80 mg/L, and the probit analysis gave a 144.6 mg/L TC50. There were mostly ocular malformations and severe vacuolisation and necrosis in the liver and axial musculature. |
2009 | [98] | Tyre debris (Zn2+) and ZnCl2. | R. sylvatica (frog). | Tyre debris (Zn) toxicology in frog larvae (effects on metamorphosis). | Laboratory from used tyre scraps. | Both the exposures caused an increase in the time for larvae to complete metamorphosis. The increase metamorphosis time caused a decrease in the subject’s mass. |
2009 | [99] | Sequential tyre powder leachates. | D. magna, C. dubia (crustaceans), P. subcapitata (algae), and D. rerio eggs (fish). | Toxicity of tyre leachates in vivo and in vitro in aquatic life. | Laboratory by abrading tyres with a rasp and then leachating the powder (1 slightly worn and 2 heavily worn tyres). | The slightly worn tyre was shown to cause the most significant toxic response. The sequential leachates were also shown to be much less toxic than the first one. Toxicology was mostly attributed to zinc. |
2010 | [100] | Tyre particle leachates. | U. lactuca (marine macroalga). | In vivo toxicity to macroalgae and Zn release. | Abrasion of 20 end-of-life car tyres with stainless steel file. | Exposure to increasing concentrations of leachate resulted in a non-linear reduction in the efficiency of photochemical energy conversion and an increase in Zn accumulation. |
2011 | [101] | Tyre and road wear particle sediment elutriate and leachate. | P. subcapitata (algae), D. manga (crustacean), and P. promelas (fish). | In vivo acute toxicity of tyre and road particles to aquatic life. | Road simulator laboratory in an interior drum testing system containing actual asphalt pavement in cassettes (1 summer and 1 winter silica-based tyre, 1 carbon-black-based summer tyre). | No concentration response was observed, but some toxicity was observed at higher incubation temperatures. |
2013 | [102] | Tyre and road wear particle sediments and elutriates. | C. dilutus (holometabolous aquatic insect), H. azteca, C. dubia (crustaceans), and Pimephales promelas (fish). | Chronic toxicity of tyre and road wear particles in vivo in water- and sediment-dwelling organisms. | Road simulator laboratory in an interior drum testing system containing actual asphalt pavement in cassettes (1 summer, 1 winter silica-based tyre, 1 carbon-black-based summer tyre). | The sediments caused a mild growth inhibition in C. dilutes but had no effect on growth or reproduction in H. azteca. The elutriates caused a slight diminished survival in larval P. promelas but had no effect on growth or reproduction in C. dubia. |
2018 | [73] | Tyre particles. | G. pulex, A. aquaticus (crustaceans), L. variegatus, and Tubifex spp. (worms). | Tyre tread particle toxicity in freshwater invertebrates. | Laboratory through cryo-grinding of a tyre tread. | The results showed no effect on the survival, growth, and feeding rate of G. pulex and A. aquaticus, the survival and growth of Tubifex spp., and the number of worms and growth of L. variegatus. |
2019 | [103] | Tyre wear particles and tyre leachates. | H. azteca (crustacean). | Acute and long-term toxicology of tyre wear particles and leachates in freshwater organisms. | Laboratory by surface abrasion of one road-worn tyre for tyre wear particles; TWPs were used for leaching. | Mortality, reproductive output, and net growth were significantly affected at higher concentrations. Tyre wear particles showed a typical concentration–response pattern, while leachates did not. |
2020 | [83] | Tyre rubber leachates compared to other plastics. | R. subcapitata, S. costatum (microalgae), and M. galloprovincialis (mussel). | Tyre wear toxicity in aquatic life (freshwater and marine). | Laboratory using tyre-derived granulate reference materials. | Tyre leachates were found to be amongst the most toxic samples tested. They caused the inhibition of algal growth, significant down-regulation of gamete fertilisation, and inhibition of normal embryonic development in mussels. |
2020 | [77] | Tyre particle leachates. | P. promelas (fish). | Tyre leachates’ in vivo toxicity in fish comparing different physical stressors (temp., UV, CO2, mechanical stress). | Laboratory by manually cutting small pieces from new tyres. | The results showed that the variations in temperature and mechanical stress caused a significant change in toxicity, whereas UV and CO2 exposure caused milder effects. |
2020 | [104] | Tyre particles (crumb rubber). | F. heteroclitus and P. promelas (fish). | In vivo toxicity through 7-day static renewal exposure. | Crumb rubber from passenger and truck tyres. | Highest concentration tested caused partial mortality in P. promelas. Bile fluorescence and EROD assay indicated that there was a presence of PAHs. |
2021 | [105] | Pristine tyre particles and leachates compared to road-worn TWPs and leachates. | H. azteca (crustacean). | Tyre wear particle suspensions’ and leachates’ toxicity in aquatic life. | Laboratory by grinding two tyres (new and used). | New TP suspensions were more toxic than those of worn TPs; however, leachates were equally toxic. New TP suspensions showed no significant effects on mortality and reproduction, but growth was significantly reduced at the highest concentration tested. |
2021 | [76] | Tyre wear particle leachates. | Coho and Chum salmon (fish). | Tyre leachates’ in vivo toxicity in coho and chum salmon. | Laboratory by grinding nine unique tyres (2 new, 7 used). | Coho salmon displayed significant behavioural changes, mortality, and changes in blood parameters after exposure. Chum salmon was unaffected by exposure. |
2021 | [84] | Tyre wear particles compared to polystyrene microplastics. | C. riparius (midge). | Tyre wear particles’ in vivo toxicity in a midge. | Laboratory through cryo-grinding of an end-of-life tyre. | Several genes encoding heat shock proteins were overexpressed, and genes coding for manganese superoxide dismutase and for the FK506-binding protein were altered. Microplastics caused cellular stress which led to some gene alterations but did not cause any mortality. |
2022 | [85] | Tyre wear particles compared to PET particles (leachates). | Freshwater bacterial community. | Tyre wear microbiological effects on freshwater ecosystems. | Laboratory by shredding of a used tyre. | TWPs caused increased bacterial growth and the creation of a biofilm that was much less diverse compared to PET. |
2022 | [106] | Tyre wear particles and leachates. | A. bahia (crustacean) and M. beryllina (fish). | Tyre particles’ and leachates’ toxicity and behavioural changes in aquatic organisms. | Laboratory through cryo-milling of a tyre tread. | TWPs caused significant alterations in swimming behaviours, a concentration-dependent reduction in growth after exposure to microparticles for both species, and a reduction in growth after exposure to nanoparticles for M. beryllina. |
2022 | [107] | Tyre particles and leachates. | D. rerio (fish) and D. manga (crustacean). | Toxicity of micro and nano tyre particles and leachates in freshwater organisms. | Laboratory through cryo-milling of a tyre. | Nano tyre particles and leachates caused an increased mortality and sublethal malformations, but micro tyre particles did not. |
2022 | [108] | 6PPD and 6PPDQ. | D. rerio (fish). | 6PPD and 6PPDQ toxicity in fish larvae. | - | 6PPDQ was found to be toxic, but no significant mortality was observed. There was a dose-dependent reduction in swimming performance in both compounds. |
2022 | [109] | Tyre wear (crumb rubber) leachates. | F. heteroclitus (fish). | Tyre leachates’ in vivo toxicity in fish with episodic exposure. | Crumb rubber. | CYP1A was up-regulated in gills, intestine, and liver, and there was a dose-dependent increase in bile fluorescence. There was increased 8-OHdG and total GSH and decreased MDA production. |
2022 | [110] | End-of-life tyre-derived granules and powder. | P. subcapitata (algae), D. manga (crustacean), and D. rerio (fish). | Tyre granules’ and powder suspensions’ acute and chronic in vivo toxicity in freshwater organisms. | ELT granules and powder from a tyre recycling plant. | Acute tests showed EC50 of over 100 μg/L for D. magna and D. rerio. Chronic tests showed an LOEC of 9.8 μg/L for D. magna and 10 μg/L for D. rerio. There were significant effects on the cell density of P. subcapitata at 100 μg/L. |
2022 | [86] | Tyre particles compared to polyester fibres. | D. manga (crustacean), H. azteca, A. aquaticus (crustaceans), and L. variegatus (worm). | Tyre particles’ acute and chronic in vivo toxicity in freshwater invertebrates. | End-of-life tyre granules collected from manufacturer and milled. | There was no effect on mobility after acute exposure, but there was an effect on survival and reproduction after chronic exposure in D. magna. There was no effect on survival for the other species; however, there was significant ingestion. |
2022 | [111] | Tyre wear particle leachates. | B. plicatilis (rotifer). | Tyre wear particle leachate in vivo toxicity in a euryhaline rotifer. | Laboratory from a tyre simulator (drum). | Acute toxicity was observed. Reproduction and population growth were decreased, and oxidative stress was induced after exposure. There was an increase in antioxidant enzymes and an induction of transcriptional dysfunction of 1082 DEGs. |
2022 | [74] | Tyre wear particles (microrubber). | C. riparius (midge) and L. variegatus (worm). | Tyre wear particle in vivo toxicity in freshwater sediment organisms. | Laboratory through cryo-grinding of an end-of-life tyre. | The results showed no significant effects on growth, survival, or reproduction. |
2022 | [112] | Tyre wear particles. | S. plana (mollusc) and H. diversicolor (worm). | Tyre wear particle in vivo toxicity in estuarine invertebrates. | Laboratory through grinding of used tyres (with liquid nitrogen). | S. plana had reductions in burial and feeding rates. Protein concentration and total energy content were affected. Total glutathione in H. diversicolor and lipid peroxidation in S. plana were changed. |
2022 | [113] | Tyre particles and leachates. | T. japonicus (crustacean). | In vivo toxicity to marine copepod. | Waste tyre crushing factory from heavy-duty trucks. | LC50 was 771.4 mg/L for particles and 5.34 g/L for leachates. Zn was identified as the main cause of the toxicity. |
2023 | [75] | 6PPDQ. | Hexagenia spp. (insect), D. magna (crustacean), Planorbella pilsbryi (mollusc), and M. nervosa (mussel). | 6PPDQ toxicity in vivo for four freshwater invertebrate species. | - | For all four species, the highest concentrations tested did not result in significant mortality. |
2023 | [114] | 6PPDQ and DTBBA. | Brachionus koreanus (marine rotifer). | 6PPDQ and DTBBA toxicity in a marine rotifer. | - | Only moderate toxicity was observed for 6PPQ; however, there was a significant response in population growth and fecundity for DTBBA. |
2024 | [78] | Aged tyre wear particles and leachates. | P. tricornutum (microalgae). | Aged TWPs’ and leachates’ in vivo toxicity in microalgae. | Laboratory by grating a used tyre. | Growth of microalgae was inhibited. Chla and Car increased over time. No significant effect on SOD and MDA. Overall, whole particles were more toxic than leachates and aged particles more than virgin ones. |
2024 | [115] | Tyre additives (leachates). | D. rerio (fish). | Tyre additives’ in vivo toxicity in fish (ophthalmological effects). | - | MBT (2-mercaptobenzothiazole) was found to be one of the main toxic compounds, as it caused a significant decrease in eye size and cell density. Many gene expressions were also changed. |
2024 | [116] | Pristine and aged TWPs and four bisphenols. | T. japonicus (crustacean). | In vivo toxicity of combined pristine and aged TWPs and four bisphenols in a crustacean. | Laboratory by grinding end-of-life tyres. | TWPs increased the toxicity of BPA and BPF and decreased the toxicity of BPAF. For BPS, there was a synergistic toxic effect with p-TWPs but a slightly antagonistic effect with a-TWPs. |
2024 | [117] | TWP leachates. | R. salina (microalga) and D. rerio (zebrafish) and U-2 OS cells and CALUX assay. | In vivo (R. salina and D. rerio) and in vitro (U-2 OS cells and CALUX assay) toxicity of TWP leachates. | Laboratory by milling unused tyres. | Leachates inhibited algal growth and induced embryotoxicity, pigment alterations, and behavioural changes in D. rerio. In vitro testing showed pro-apoptotic changes and endocrine-disrupting potential. |
2024 | [118] | Tyre wear particles. | D. rerio (zebrafish). | In vivo toxicity in the gills, liver, and gut and accumulation and depuration of TWPs. | Laboratory by grinding mini-car tyre scraps. | There was a dose-dependent TWP accumulation in the gills and gut for a long time, and oxidative stress was induced in the gills and liver. There were dose-dependent up- and down-regulations of metabolic processes by the liver. |
(c) | ||||||
Year | Ref. | Source | Species | Parameters Examined | Testing Conditions | Main Conclusions |
2011 | [119] | Crumb rubber. | 13 soil nematodes (mainly Helicotylenchus) (worm). | Crumb rubber toxicity and effects on nematodes and soil. | - | After exposure, the plant parasite and omnivorous nematode population decreased, and the predatory nematode population increased. Soil bulk density and pH were decreased, and soil moisture was increased. |
2018 | [120] | Aged crumb rubber. | E. fetida (worm). | Aged crumb rubber toxicity to earthworms. | - | Exposure did not reduce earthworm body weight, but it reduced survival time during a stress test. Microbial respiration rates were not impacted. |
2020 | [121] | Tyre tread particles. | E. crypticus (worm). | Tyre tread particle effects on soil fauna and worm gut microbiota. | Laboratory by grating a used tyre. | Exposure caused a decrease in survival and reproduction and disrupted the microbiota of the worm gut and the soil. |
2021 | [122] | Tyre tread particles. | E. fetida (worm). | Tyre particles’ effect on earthworms (bioaccumulation of heavy metals and oxidative stress). | Laboratory by cryo-grinding a used tyre tread. | Higher concentrations caused oxidative stress, as well as increased catalase and peroxidase activity and lipid peroxidation levels, and reduced activity of SOD and GST. |
2021 | [123] | Tyre particles. | E. crypticus (worm), F. candida (springtail), and P. scaber (crustacean). | Tyre particles’ toxicology when spiked in soil or food. | Laboratory through cryo-milling end-of-life tyres. | In soil, at high concentrations, there was a decrease in F. candida reproduction and survival and the AChE activity of P. scaber. In food, at high concentrations, F. candida survival was reduced. |
2021 | [124] | Tyre particles. | Soil bacterial community. | Tyre particles’ effect on bacterial community when spiked into soil. | Laboratory by grating a used tyre. | Different ARGs were found in the samples spiked with tyre particles compared to the control, and the amounts were significantly increased when placed under stress from heavy metals and antibiotics. |
2021 | [125] | Tyre wear particles. | Sinapis alba L. and Lepidium sativum L. (plants). | Tyre particle phytotoxicity (biological activity, CO2, germination index). | - | Soils with 50 and 75% tyre particles showed decreased biological activity and CO2-C emissions. There was a subchronical phytotoxicity and a lower germination index compared to the control. |
2021 | [126] | Tyre wear particles. | C. elegans (worm). | Tyre particle time-dependent toxicity (soil pre-incubation and exposure time). | Laboratory by grinding a used tyre. | The incubation increased the toxicity of the tyre wear particles, and the lifetime of the organisms was reduced faster in the treated groups, especially with lifetime exposure. |
2022 | [127] | Tyre wear particles compared to polyester fibres and natural particles. | P. scaber (terrestrial crustacean). | Tyre particle time-dependent toxicity (immune system). | Laboratory by cryo-milling used tyre scraps. | After 4 days of exposure, the total number of haemocytes was decreased, and the proportions of different haemocytes were altered. After 7 days of exposure, there was an increase in superoxide dismutase activity and metabolic activity. |
2022 | [128] | Tyre wear particles from cars, bicycles, and e-scooters. | V. radiata (plant) and F. candida (springtail). | Tyre particle toxicity in soil organisms. | Laboratory by grating new tyre treads from 3 different personal mobility means. | Bicycles and scooters changed the soil’s bulk density and water holding capacity and reduced plant growth. Car tyre particles leached organic compounds and had severe effects on springtails. |
2022 | [129] | Microplastics (tyre particles and polystyrene). | E. andrei (worm). | Time-dependent in vivo toxicity in earthworms. | Bulk product of recycled tyres. | Only minor effects could be observed on a subcellular level at environmentally relevant concentrations. |
2023 | [130] | Tyre wear particles compared to polyester microfibres. | F. candida (springtail) and P. scaber (terrestrial crustacean). | Change in chlorpyrifos toxicity after exposure to tyre particles for soil arthropods. | Laboratory by cryo-milling used tyres. | The lethality of chlorpyrifos and its effects were reduced significantly after exposure. |
2023 | [131] | Tyre rubber and tyre leachates. | Unspecified soil microorganisms. | Toxicity in microorganisms. | Laboratory by grinding tyres. | No biodegradation in any sample, but the toxicity was higher when exposed to tyre shred particles. MTT test showed 28% inhibition of the viability for the samples with particles. |
2023 | [132] | 6PPDQ. | C. elegans (worm). | In vivo toxicity of 6PPDQ in nematodes. | 6PPDQ. | A total of 0.1–10 μg/L of 6-PPDQ caused several forms of abnormal locomotion behaviours and the neurodegeneration of D-type motor neurons at 10 μg/L. |
Ref. | Non-Asbestos Organic (NAO) | Low-Metallic | Semi-Metallic | Hybrid Vehicle | Prototype | Asbestos Containing | Heavy-Duty (All) | Not Specified |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mammalians | [48,80,87] | [46,48,80,87] | [48,80] | [80] | [46,47,52,59] | [53,54,55] | [51] | [49,50,58,59,88,89] |
Aquatic | [81] |
Ref. | Summer | Winter | All-Season | Winter Studded | Reference Material | 6PPDQ and Extracts | Heavy-Duty | Not Specified |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mammalians | [57,62,94] | [57,68,82] | [94] | [60,66,67,68,82,92] | [43] | [70,71] | [61,93] | [43,44,45,56,63,64,65,69,90,91,93,95,96] |
Aquatic | [101,102] | [101,102] | [83,104,109] | [75,108,114,115,116] | [104,113] | [56,73,74,76,77,78,84,85,86,97,98,99,100,103,105,106,107,110,111,112,116,117,118] | ||
Terrestrial | [119,120,129] | [125,132] | [121,122,123,124,125,126,127,128,130,131] |
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Year | Ref. | Brakes | Tyres | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | [9] | N | Y | Aquatic environment |
2020 | [31] | N | Y | Human effects |
2022 | [32] | Y | N | Human effects |
2023 | [33] | Y | N | On mammalian models |
2023 | [24] | N | Y | In vivo and in vitro studies |
2023 | [34] | N | Y | Only urban parks |
2024 | [35] | N | Y | Environmental impact |
2024 | [22] | N | Y | Mostly ecological and ecotoxicological |
2024 | [36] | N | Y | Leachates |
2024 | [37] | N | Y | Aquatic and terrestrial effects |
2024 | [38] | N | Y | Environmental and health |
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Christou, A.; Giechaskiel, B.; Olofsson, U.; Grigoratos, T. Review of Health Effects of Automotive Brake and Tyre Wear Particles. Toxics 2025, 13, 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13040301
Christou A, Giechaskiel B, Olofsson U, Grigoratos T. Review of Health Effects of Automotive Brake and Tyre Wear Particles. Toxics. 2025; 13(4):301. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13040301
Chicago/Turabian StyleChristou, Athanasia, Barouch Giechaskiel, Ulf Olofsson, and Theodoros Grigoratos. 2025. "Review of Health Effects of Automotive Brake and Tyre Wear Particles" Toxics 13, no. 4: 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13040301
APA StyleChristou, A., Giechaskiel, B., Olofsson, U., & Grigoratos, T. (2025). Review of Health Effects of Automotive Brake and Tyre Wear Particles. Toxics, 13(4), 301. https://doi.org/10.3390/toxics13040301