| Literature DB >> 21126379 |
Dorota Napierska1, Leen C J Thomassen, Dominique Lison, Johan A Martens, Peter H Hoet.
Abstract
Silica nanoparticles (SNPs) are produced on an industrial scale and are an addition to a growing number of commercial products. SNPs also have great potential for a variety of diagnostic and therapeutic applications in medicine. Contrary to the well-studied crystalline micron-sized silica, relatively little information exists on the toxicity of its amorphous and nano-size forms. Because nanoparticles possess novel properties, kinetics and unusual bioactivity, their potential biological effects may differ greatly from those of micron-size bulk materials. In this review, we summarize the physico-chemical properties of the different nano-sized silica materials that can affect their interaction with biological systems, with a specific emphasis on inhalation exposure. We discuss recent in vitro and in vivo investigations into the toxicity of nanosilica, both crystalline and amorphous. Most of the in vitro studies of SNPs report results of cellular uptake, size- and dose-dependent cytotoxicity, increased reactive oxygen species levels and pro-inflammatory stimulation. Evidence from a limited number of in vivo studies demonstrates largely reversible lung inflammation, granuloma formation and focal emphysema, with no progressive lung fibrosis. Clearly, more research with standardized materials is needed to enable comparison of experimental data for the different forms of nanosilicas and to establish which physico-chemical properties are responsible for the observed toxicity of SNPs.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21126379 PMCID: PMC3014868 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8977-7-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Figure 1Polymerization of silicic acid molecules through formation of siloxane bond and water.
Figure 2General scheme of silica synthesis processes. Adapted and complemented from [177].
Overview of silica materials and relevant properties
| Material | Nature of product | Crystallinity | Particle size | Porosity | Polarity | Purity | Applications | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colloidal silica | Sol | Amorphous | 1-1000 nm | Dense | Hydrophillic | Very high | Binders, ink | [ |
| Stober silica | Sol | Amorphous | 10-1000 nm | Tunable porosity | Hydrophillic | Very high | Research | [ |
| Precipitated silica | Powder | Amorphous | 5-6 nm primary particles precipitated to 500 nm - 50 μm aggregates | Tunable porosity | Hydrophillic | Very high | Filler | [ |
| Silica gel | Powder | Amorphous | 0.5 - 5 nm primary particles gelled to networks and milled to 500 μm - 6 mm aggregates | Tunable, void spaces between primary particles | Hydrophillic | Very high | Dessicant, filler | [ |
| Mesoporous silica | Powder | Amorphous | 50 - 1000 nm, aggregated because of calcinations | Mesoporous | Hydrophobic | Very high | Drug delivery, catalysis, imaging | [ |
| Pyrogenic silica (fumed silica) | Powder | Amorphous | 2-50 nm primary particles fused to 1-250 μm aggregates | Void spaces between primary particles | Hydrophobic | Very high | Tickner, performance additive | [ |
| Vitreous silica (fused silica glass) | Powder | Amorphous | 50-2000 μm | Dense | Hydrophobic (grinded: hydrophilic) | Variable | Glass | [ |
| Quartz | Powder | Crystalline | 50 nm- several μm | Dense | Hydrophobic/(grinded: hydrophilic) | Variable | Geologic mineral, Piezoelectricity | [ |
| Cristobalite | Powder | Crystalline | 1 μm - several cm | Dense | Hydrophobic | Variable | Geologic mineral | [ |
| Zeosils (porosil) | Powder | Crystalline | 0.05-5000 μm | Porous | Hydrophillic/hydrophobic | Very high | Adsorbent | [ |
| Clathrasils (porosil) | Powder | Crystalline | 0.5-5000 μm | Porous | Hydrophillic/hydrophobic | Very high | Gas separation | [ |
| Diatomeus earth, kieselguhr | Powder | Amorphous, partially crystalline | 5-120 μm | Dense | Hydrophillic/hydrophobic | Low (90%) | Filter, filling material | [ |
Figure 3Electron microscopy images of Stöber silica sol particles (left) and MFI type zeosil (right).
Figure 4Atomic representation of (left) a zeosil with microporous channels (MFI type) and (right) clathrasil with a denser framework (SOD type). Black and gray circles represent silicon and oxygen atoms, respectively. Figure made with Vesta 2.0.3 [178] with unit cell coordinates from [22].
Figure 5Hydroxyl groups on the surface of silica. Covalent bonds and hydrogen bonds are presented as full and dotted lines, respectively.
In vitro studies on nanosilica particles (SNPs) toxicity
| Silica form | Size (primary) | Material characterization | Cells used | Test | Biological endpoints and findings | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amorphous | 40 nm- 5 μm | Not specified | A549 | • Replication and transcription assays | • Uptake of all particles into the cytoplasm and nuclear localization of nanoparticles between 40 and 70 nm | [ |
| Amorphous | 50 nm | • Synthesis (ref. to literature) | A549 | • laser scanning confocal microscope | • Uptake not detected in the nuclear region | [ |
| Amorphous (colloidal) | 15 and 46 nm | • Particle sizes and distribution | A549 | • SRB (sulforhodamine B) and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- and time-dependent | [ |
| Amorphous | 60 and | • Size distribution analysis | A549 | • LDH assay | • Cytotoxicity differed among the cell lines and was dose- and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | ~14 nm | • Size distribution | A549 | • MTT and WST-1 assays | • Little cytotoxic effects in 4 cell lines tested at the concentration below 250 μg/ml within 48 h | [ |
| Amorphous | 10 and 80 nm | o Provided by producer for the primary particles (surface area: 640 and 440 m2/g for 10 and 80 nm particle, respectively) | A549 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose-dependent | [ |
| Amorphous | 7 and 5-15 nm | o Surface area (350 and 644 m2/g for 7 and 5-15 nm particle, respectively) | Beas-2B | • Incorporation of SNPs into the cells (confocal LSM) | • SNPs were incorporated into the cells and distributed around the nucleus area | [ |
| Amorphous | 10-20 nm | o Provided by manufacturer (surface area: 140-180 m2/g) | A549 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- and time-dependent | [ |
| Amorphous | 30, 48, 118 and 535 nm | • Synthesis method | HEL-30 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | 70, 300 and 1000 nm | Not specified | XS52 | • TEM analysis of cells | • SNPs of 300 and 1000 nm were incorporated into the cells and located in cytoplasm only; nanoparticles of 70 nm were located in nucleus as well as cytoplasm | [ |
| Amorphous | 15, 30 and 365 nm | • Size distribution | HaCaT | • CCK assay | • Cytotoxicity was dose- and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | 15 nm | • Size distribution | HaCaT | • Flow cytometric analysis of methylated DNA | • Treatment with SNPs induced Global DNA hypomethylation | [ |
| Amorphous | 21 and 80 nm | • Particle preparation and dispersion | WS1 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Toxicity was seen at concentrations exceeding 138 μg/ml | [ |
| Amorphous | 20 nm | Only provided by producer (surface area: 640 ± 50 m2/g) | RAW264.7 | • Membrane fluidity measurements (FRAP technique by LSCM) | • Exposure to SNPs increased ROS generation and decrease of the membrane fluidity | [ |
| Amorphous | 14 nm | Only provided by producer (surface area: 200 m2/g) | Caco-2 | • LDH and WST-1 assay | • Cytotoxicity observed | [ |
| Amorphous | 21, 48 and 86 nm | • Size distribution analysis | L-02 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- time - and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | 4-40 nm (mean size: 14) | Not specified | HDMEC | • MTS assay | • The particles were internalized but they did not exert cytotoxic effects | [ |
| Amorphous (monodisperse) | 14, 15, 16, 19, 60, 104, 335 nm | • Particle preparation and stability | EAHY926 | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic and affected the exposed cells faster) | [ |
| Amorphous | 21 and 48 nm | • Size distribution analysis | H9c2(2-1) | • MTT and LDH assays | • Cytotoxicity was dose- time - and size-dependent (smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | From 20 nm to below 400 nm | • the dispersion characteristics (size, size distribution, size evolution) | 3T3-L1 | • comet assay | • No detectable genotoxicity (the results were independently validated in two separate laboratories) | [ |
| Amorphous (monodisperse) | 16, 60 and 104 nm | • Particle preparation and stability | A549 | • MTT assay | • Results suggest that non-cytotoxic doses of SNPs may be capable of inducing slight chromosome breakage, loss and mitotic slippage, and at higher concentration possibly mitotic arrest. | [ |
| Amorphous (monodisperse) | from 2 up to 335 nm | • Particle preparation and stability | J774 | • MTT and WST-1 assays | • in murine macrophages, the cytotoxic response, after treatment with SNPs of 17 different sizes, increased with external surface area and decreased with micopore volume | [ |
| Amorphous | 30 nm | • Provided by producer for primary partilcles (surface area: 165 m2/g) | 3T3 | • MTS assay | • SNPs depleted serum proteins from cell culture media | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 110 nm (pore diameter of ~2.5 nm) | • Structure | 3T3-L1 | • Confocal microscope | • Particles were internalized into cells and accumulated in cytoplasm | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | Not specified (MCM-41 particle type) | • Synthesis and functionalization of particles | HeLa | • MTT, WST-1 and LDH assays | • No cytotoxicity was observed up to 50 μg/ml | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 108, 110, 111 and 115 nm | • Synthesis (ref to the previous study) and surface modification | hMSCs | • MTT assay | • The modulation of surface charge and its threshold affects the uptake and is specific to cell type | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous silica nanorods capped with iron oxide NPs) | 200 × 80 nm (pore diameter of ~3 nm) | • Preparation and functionalization | HeLa | • Confocal fluorescence microscopy | • Particles were endocytosed by the cells and biocompatible (concentration used: 0.2 mg/mL) | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 30, 50, 110, 170 and 280 nm | • Synthesis, suspension stability (no interparticle aggregation), hydrodynamic diamaters, zeta potential | HeLa | • MTT | • Cellular uptake is highly particle size-dependent (with the optimum size of 50 nm); little cytotoxicity up to 100 mg/ml | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) loaded with anticancer drugs) | <130 nm (pore diameter of ~2 nm) | • Preparation, shape, aggregation/stability in aqueous solution | PANC-1 | • Fluorescence and confocal microscopy | • The particles offer the possibility of controlled release of anticancer drugs (non-loaded particles did not caused cytotoxicity) | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 150 nm (pore diameter of ~2.4 nm) | • Synthesis, functionalization, surface area (850 m2/g), zeta potential | HeLa | • Flow cytometry | • Uptake of particles can be regulated by different surface functionalization | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 100 - 300 nm (pore diameter of ~3 nm) - | • Synthesis (ref. to the previous study), funcionalization, surface area (1138 m2/g), pore volumes, number of silanol group | Rabbit RBCs | • Hemolysis assay | • The hemolytic activity of silica nanoparticles depends only on the concentration of negatively charged silanol groups | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 300-650 nm (pore diameter of 31Å) and SBA-15 type | • Synthesis, | HL-60 | • Oxygen consumption assay | • Particles with larger size and larger pores caused concentration- and time dependent inhibition of cellular respiration | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous and silica nanospheres) | 250 nm; 166x320 nm (pore diameter = 3.5 nm) | • Synthesis and functionalization | SK-N-SH | • Staining with trypan blue and determination of viable cells using a hemacytometer | • The cytotoxicity of particles was related to the adsorptive surface area of the particle (the most toxic malodorous silica are those with the largest BET surface areas) | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 270 ± 50 nm (pore diameter of 3.9 nm) and 2.5 μm ± 500 nm (pore diameter of 2.8 nm) | • Synthesis | Human monocyte-derived | • Apoptosis/necrosis (Annexin V/PI assay) | • Viability, uptake and immune regulatory markers were affected with increasing size and dose | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) | 190, 420 and 1220 nm | • Synthesis and functionalization | MDA-MB-468 COS-7 | • MTT assay | • The cytotoxicity of particles was highly correlated with particle sizes ((smaller particles were more toxic) | [ |
| Amorphous | 100 and 200 nm | • rod-shaped and spherical particles (Stöber), not-coated and coated with fibronectin or polyethylene glycol (PEG), | MET-5A | • LDH assay | • Dosimetric comparison of acicular and isotropic particulate materials is not straightforward | [ |
| Amorphous | 130 nm and 155 nm; iron oxide particle with silica shell (80 nm) | • Size distribution | Hmy2 | • MTT assay and Trypan Blue exclusion | • The cytotoxicity of particles depended on the cell type tested | [ |
| Crystalline | Particle sizes not uniform (7.21, 9.08 and 123.21 nm) | • Size and concentration | WIL2-NS | • MTT assay | • Significant dose-dependent decrease in viability | [ |
In vivo studies on nanosilica particles (SNPs) toxicity
| Silica | Size | Material characterization | Exposure model | Test | Biological endpoints and findings | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quartz | 10-20 nm (average size: 12), 30-65 (average size: 50), 300 nm - 2 μm | • Synthesis | Rats instilled intratracheally with various particle types (1 or 5 mg/kg), sacrificed at 24 h, 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months post-exposure | • Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid analysis: cell counts, differentials, and pulmonary biomarkers (Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and lavage fluid protein) | Exposures to the various quartz particles produced differential degrees of pulmonary inflammation and cytotoxicity, which were not consistent with particle size but correlated with surface activity, particularly hemolytic potential. | [ |
| Silica dust | 10 ± 5 nm; and 0.5-10 μm (80% of the particles | • Composition uknown | Rats instilled intratracheally (20 mg), sacrificed 1 and 2 months after dosing | • The changes of lung/body coefficient and hydroxyproline content | One month after instillation cellular nodules (Stage I silicosis) were found in the nanosized SiO2 group, while in microsized SiO2 group Stage II, II+ of silicotic nodules were observed. | [ |
| Ludox colloidal silica | - | • Mass median aerodynamic diameter (2.9, 3.3 and 3.7 μm) | Rats Inhalation (nose-only) for 2 or 4 weeks at concentrations 10, 50 and 150 mg/m3. | • Lung silica analysis | The inflammatory responses, mainly seen as increased numbers of neutrophils in BALF, following the 2 and/or 4 weeks of exposure was evident at 50 mg/m3 (or higher) group. Three months after exposure most biochemical parameters returned to control values. | [ |
| Aerosol containing colloidal silica | Average size: 22 nm | • Mass median aerodynamic diameter (2.9, 3.3 and 3.7 μm) | Rats inhalation (from 10 to 150 mg/m3), 6 h/day, 5 days/week for 4 weeks; 3 months postexposure | • Lung silica determination | No effects after exposure to the lowest concentration | [ |
| Colloidal silica | (UFCSs, average size of 14 nm) | • Size distribution | Mice instilled intratracheally (3 mg) and sacrificed 0.5, 2, 6,12 and 24 h after dosing | • Histopathology | Histopathological examination revealed for both sizes bronchiolar degeneration, necrosis, neutrophilic inflammation, alveolar type II cell swelling and alveolar macrophage accumulation. | [ |
| Colloidal silica | average size: 14 nm | • Size distribution | Mice instilled intratracheally (0.3,3,10,30 or 100 μg) and sacrificed 3 days after dosing; 1 to 30 days postexposure | • BAL analysis: cells quantification, viability and differentiation, total protein concentration | Exposure up to 100 μg of UFCSs produced moderate to severe pulmonary inflammation and tissue injury 3 days post exposure. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 14 nm | • Endotoxins content | Mice instilled intratracheally (2,10 and 50 mg/kg) and sacrificed 24 h, 1,4 and 14 weeks after dosing | • BAL analysis: total protein and endotoxin concentration, cell differential counts | Significantly increased lung weights, total BAL cells and proteins were observed until 1 week after treatment. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 37.9 ± 3.3 nm | • Size distribution | Rats inhalation (24.1 mg/m3, 40 min/day, 4 weeks | • Electrocardiography | Inhalation of SNP under identical conditions caused the strongest pulmonary and cardi ovascular alterations in old rats, yet less change in young and adult rats. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 37 nm and 83 nm | • The generation of nanosilica aerosol | Rats inhalation | • Bal analysis: cell counts, differentials, enzymatic activity of LDH,and ALP | One- or three-day aerosol exposure produced no significant pulmonary inflammatory, genotoxic, or adverse lung histopathological effects in rats exposed to very high particle numbers corresponding to a range of mass concentrations (1.8 or 86 mg/m3). | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 14 nm | o Daily mean mass median aerodynamic diameter (2.1 ± 0.1 μm) | Rats inhalation | • Breathing parameters | Exposure to SNPs alone resulted in transient changes in breathing parameters during exposure, and in nasal and alveolar inflammation with neutrophils and macrophages. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | ~30 nm and ~30 μm | • Size distribution | Feeding of mice for 10 weeks (total fed amount of 140 g/kg mice) | • Blood analysis | The nano-sized silica particle dieted group showed higher value of ALT (alanine aminotransferase) than normal and micron-sized silica dieted groups. | [ |
| Amorphous silica (organically modified) | 20-25 nm | • Synthesis | Mice injected intravenously with SPN | • Fluorescence imaging (CRi) | Greater acummulation of nanoparticles in liver, spleen and stomach that in kidney, heart and lungs. | [ |
| Amorphous (mesoporous) silica | 150 nm, 800 nm and 4 μm | • Synthesis | Rats injected subcutaneously (30 mg per rat), Mice injected intraperitoneally and intravenously | • Hematoxylin and eosin staining and histological examination | When the particles were injected subcutaneously, the amount of residual material decreased progressively over 3 months, with good biocompatibility on histology at all time points. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 75, 311 and 830 nm | Not specified | Mice injected intravenously (10-100 mg/kg) | • H&E staining; histological analysis of the liver, kidney, spleen and lung | 70 nm SNP induced liver injury at 30 mg/kg body weight, while SP300 or 1000 had no effect even at 100 mg/kg. | [ |
| Amorphous silica | 50, 100 and 200 nm | • Synthesis | Mice injected intravenously (50 mg/kg) | • Confocal laser scanning microscopy | Significant increase of inflammation in the liver at 12 h for the 100 and 200 nm silica nanoparticles treatment groups. | [ |