Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) have been widely explored as potential technologies for information systems and medical applications. The impact of SWCNTs on human health is of prime concern, if SWCNTs have a future in the manufacturing industry. This study proposes a novel, inflammation-independent paradigm of toxicity for SWCNTs, identifying the protein citrullination process as early-stage indicator of inflammatory responses of macrophages (THP-1) and of subtle phenotypic damages of lung epithelial (A549) cells following exposure to chemically-treated SWCNTs. Our results showed that, while most of the cellular responses of A549 cells exposed to SWCNTs are different to those of similarly treated THP-1 cells, the protein citrullination process is triggered in a dose- and time-dependent manner in both cell lines, with thresholds comparable between inflammatory (THP-1) and non-inflammatory (A549) cell types. The cellular mechanism proposed herein could have a high impact in predicting the current risk associated with environmental exposure to SWCNTs.
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) have been widely explored as potential technologies for information systems and medical applications. The impact of SWCNTs on human health is of prime concern, if SWCNTs have a future in the manufacturing industry. This study proposes a novel, inflammation-independent paradigm of toxicity for SWCNTs, identifying the protein citrullination process as early-stage indicator of inflammatory responses of macrophages (THP-1) and of subtle phenotypic damages of lung epithelial (A549) cells following exposure to chemically-treated SWCNTs. Our results showed that, while most of the cellular responses of A549 cells exposed to SWCNTs are different to those of similarly treated THP-1 cells, the protein citrullination process is triggered in a dose- and time-dependent manner in both cell lines, with thresholds comparable between inflammatory (THP-1) and non-inflammatory (A549) cell types. The cellular mechanism proposed herein could have a high impact in predicting the current risk associated with environmental exposure to SWCNTs.
Single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) represent a relatively newly discovered allotrope of
carbon1 having a wide range of potential applications in the information and
communications technology (ICT)23 and medicine4567
fields.As for many other nanomaterials, several aspects of the effects of SWCNTs to human health are
poorly defined8. From 2006 onwards, the number of reports investigating in
vitro910 and in vivo111213 the lung toxicity
of SWCNTs has increased exponentially but the current knowledge of SWCNTs' adverse effects in
the lungs is still fragmentary, and sometimes contradictory81415. This
fragmentation originates from three main aspects16. Firstly, the studies
exploring SWCNTs' toxicity are not standardised for SWCNTs produced by different methods and
do not employ equivalent testing models. Secondly, in many cases such experiments do not
accurately reflect actual exposure conditions. This originates ultimately from the absence of
environmental exposure data on SWCNTs and of specific information regarding the
end-of-life/disposal of SWCNTs-based devices from ICT and medical applications. Thirdly,
specific cellular mechanisms through which SWCNTs may exert their adverse toxic effects in
vivo are still under debate.By looking at the emerging picture, the most widely accepted paradigms14 for
SWCNTs' toxicity are (a) the oxidative stress131718 (due to redox features
of this nanomaterial19 or of transition metals and other environmental
contaminants present in SWCNTs1820) and (b) inflammation (associated with
inflammatory and fibrogenic responses in the lungs21 and ineffective
recognition of SWCNTs by macrophages22). This study proposes a potential novel
paradigm according to which SWCNTs triggered a toxic response by activating an
inflammation-independent cellular mechanism. Citrullination (i.e., the enzymatic conversion of
protein-contained arginine to citrulline carried out by peptidylarginine deiminase (PAD)) was
identified as an early-stage indicator of such inflammation-independent mechanism. Macrophages
(THP-1 cells) and lung epithelial (A549) cells were exposed to chemically-treated SWCNTs and
the protein citrullination levels were quantified. Cellular protein modification levels were
then correlated to cytotoxic cellular responses and to the secretion of pro-inflammatory
cytokines.Citrullination is known as an inflammation associated process23 characteristic
of extra-articular manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)242526, such
as interstitial pneumonia and rheumatoid nodules. Our group has recently demonstrated that
exposure to various nanomaterials does induce citrullination27, which might
ultimately trigger autoimmune diseases. Protein citrullination, as well as
Ca2+-mediated PAD activation, was in fact detected in cultured human cells
(A549 and THP-1 cells) and in mouse lung tissue after exposure to nanosized amorphous silicon
dioxide (SiO2), ultra-fine carbon black (ufCB) and SWCNTs27.Here, we present for the first time evidence that SWCNTs are able to induce protein
citrullination in a lung epithelial cell line prior to any detectable onset of inflammatory
responses. SWCNTs were tested following chemical treatment, since chemical modifications are
known to reduce the amount of toxic metal impurities (used in the production of the carbon
nanomaterials and present in the as-produced, pristine SWCNTs) that can ultimately induce
oxidative stress and cytokine secretion in cells exposed to SWCNTs. Furthermore, chemical
modifications are fundamental to increasing the manufacturability and biocompatibility of
SWCNTs for ICT and medical applications, thus making our testing model relevant when compared
to realistic exposure scenarios of the manufacturing industry. Our results clearly indicated
that exposure to SWCNTs induced citrullination in THP-1 and A549 cells after 6 h. In
particular, high citrullination levels were detected in lung epithelial cells, which are not
responsible for inflammation responses, thus ultimately advocating citrullination as an
inflammation-independent process and highlighting the potential use of citrullination as
early-stage indicator of an emerging inflammation-independent paradigm of SWCNTs'
toxicity.
Results
High content screening and analysis (HCSA)
Protein citrullination
Human lung epithelial (A549) cells and phagocytic (THP-1) cells were exposed to various
SWCNTs concentrations (1, 5, 10 μg/ml) for 6 h and 24 h, and HCSA was carried out to
quantify the induction of protein citrullination. The data (Figure
1A) indicated a significant increase in protein citrullination in both cell
lines in a time- and dose-dependent manner, with maximum effects seen at 24 h and at the
highest dose (10 μg/ml) tested. Immunofluorescent images of cells exposed to
chemically-treated SWCNTs (Figure 1B) showed citrullinated
proteins in the cytoplasm and around the nucleus after 24 exposure, thus validating that
citrullinated proteins were expressed.
Figure 1
Citrullination levels in THP-1 and A549 cells exposed to chemically-treated SWCNTs
(p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA) for 6 and
24 h.
(A) Graphical tables (heatmaps) reflect the citrullination levels ranging from dark
green (lower than 15% change from the maximum value measured) to bright green (30%),
yellow (50%), bright orange (60%), dark orange (75%) and finally red (higher than 75%
change from the maximum value). (B) Representative fluorescent images of untreated
(N/T), SWCNTs-treated and PAD-treated (P/T) THP-1 and A549 cells after 24 h exposure.
Cells were immunostained for citrulline expression (in green) and nuclei (in blue).
SWCNTs sample: p-SWCNTs; scale bar: 40 μm (10× magnification).
By increasing the complexity of the SWCNT's functionalization (p-SWCNTs < p
SWCNTs/BSA < f-SWCNTs < f-SWCNTs/BSA), the induction of citrullinated proteins
decreased. High citrullination levels were found in fact when cells were treated with
p-SWCNTs, while cells exposed to f-SWCNTs/BSA showed low citrullination levels. However,
high levels of citrullination were detected after exposure to Mal-SWCNTs/BSA. This could
be associated with the presence of cytotoxic maleic moieties on the nanotubes
surface.Interestingly, significantly high citrullination was observed in A549 cells (which are
cells not directly involved in inflammation responses) treated with SWCNTs. In detail,
citrullination was detectable in SWCNTs-treated A549 cells even after 6 h exposure
(Figure 1A). This suggested that the induction of protein
citrullination could be considered as a sign of early cellular damage in an in
vitro, non-inflammatory model such as A549 cells.
Cytotoxicity responses
Three different concentrations (1, 5, 10 μg/ml) of SWCNTs were tested on THP-1 and A549
cell populations at three time points (3, 6, 24 h). Cell count reduction, cell membrane
permeability, lysosomal mass/pH and nuclear morphology changes were the cell parameters
monitored by HCSA (Figure 2).
Figure 2
Graphical tables (heatmaps) of the cytotoxicity data of THP-1 and A549 cells exposed
to p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA for 3, 6 and
24 h.
Colorimetric gradient tables reflect the changes in cell count reduction, cell membrane
permeability, lysosomal mass/pH, nuclear area and nuclear intensity. Colours range from
dark green (values lower than 15% change from the maximum value measured) to bright
green (30%), yellow (50%), bright orange (60%), dark orange (75%) and finally to red
(values higher than 75% change from maximum value). Heatmap values are normalised to the
percentages of the positive control (P/C) and Z-score is calculated as described in the
statistical analysis section. Data represent two independent experiments performed in
triplicate samples.
Cell count reduction
A dose- and time- dependent reduction of cell viability was detected when THP-1 cells
were exposed to SWCNTs (Figure 2). In detail, significant
reduction in cell count was seen after 3 h exposure to p-SWCNTS/BSA and f-SWCNTS/BSA,
and after 6 h exposure to p-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA. In contrast, A549 cells
showed a decreased cell count only when exposed to the highest concentration (10 μg/ml)
of p-SWCNTs and f-SWCNTs for 24 h.
Cell membrane permeability
It has been shown that alterations of the cellular membrane permeability are often
associated with an on-going toxic or apoptotic cell responses (21). A clear dose-dependent increase in cell membrane permeability was
observed in both THP-1 and A549 cells when exposed to p-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs and
f-SWCNTs/BSA (Figure 2), whereas p-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA
caused significant cell membrane permeability changes only at the highest concentration
(10 μg/ml) in both cell lines.
Lysosomal mass/pH
Lysosomal mass/pH changes were significant when THP-1 cells were exposed to p-SWCNTs,
f-SWCNTs and f-SWCNTs/BSA, while subtle lysosomal mass/pH changes were detected in THP-1
cells exposed to p-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA (Figure 2).
Lysosomal mass/pH was also markedly altered in A549 cells, with the lowest response
associated with the exposure to Mal-SWCNTs/BSA.
Nuclear area and nuclear intensity
Since changes in the nuclear morphology can be an additional sign of cell stress and
apoptotic/toxic stimuli, the nuclear size and intensity of THP-1 and A549 cells were
monitored after exposure to SWCNTs for extended exposure intervals (24 h). We observed
significant nuclear morphological changes in SWCNTs-treated THP-1 cells, while the
nuclear morphology was only marginally altered in A549 cells exposed to SWCNTs (Figure 2).
Cytokines secretion
To further explore the possible interdependence between the citrullination process and
the inflammatory changes in cells of different origin as triggered by exposure to
chemically-treated SWCNTs, the secretion of the pro-inflammatory cytokines Tumour Necrosis
Factor-alpha (TNF-α) and Interleukin-6 (IL-6) was quantified after treatment of
inflammatory (THP-1 cells) and non-inflammatory (A549) cells with such nanomaterials.TNF-α and IL-6 are known to be among the most important cell-signalling protein molecules
secreted by activated macrophages (such as PMA-activated THP-1 cells) during
inflammation28. Figure 3 and Figure
4 display the amount of TNF-α and IL-6 secreted by THP-1 and A549 cells exposed
for 6 and 24 h to increasing concentrations (1, 5 and 10 μg/ml) of p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA,
f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA, Mal-SWCNTs/BSA. For THP-1 cells, we observed that the secretion
resulted to be time- and dose-dependent. Interestingly, a higher secretion of TNF-α and
IL-6 was detected when SWCNTs were conjugated with BSA (p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs/BSA and
Mal-SWCNTs/BSA), while lower levels of TNF-α and IL-6 were detected after exposure to
unconjugated SWCNTs (p-SWCNTs and f-SWCNTs). This phenomenon could be associated with the
higher de-bundling of BSA-conjugated SWCNTs, which might have triggered the onset of acute
phase reaction.
Figure 3
Release of (A) TNF-α and (B) IL-6 from THP-1 cells after 6 h (light grey) and 24 h
(dark grey) exposure to p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA
at various concentrations (1, 5 and 10 μg/mL).
The symbols (*), (**) and (***) indicate significant time-dependent changes (p
< 0.05, p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively).
Figure 4
Release of (A) TNF-α and (B) IL-6 from A549 cells after 6 h (light grey) and 24 h
(dark grey) exposure to p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA
at various concentrations (1, 5 and 10 μg/mL).
The symbols (*) and (***) indicate significant time-dependent changes (p <
0.05 and p < 0.001, respectively).
In contrast, exposure of A549 cells to SWCNTs did not significantly trigger the secretion
of TNF-α (Figure 4A) or IL-6 (Figure 4B) over
6 and 24 h exposure, leaving the levels of the secreted proteins comparable to those of
the untreated cell culture (N/T).
Discussion
Citrullination has been reported to be a process present in a wide range of inflammatory
tissues, suggesting that this is an inflammation-dependent rather than disease-dependent
process23. Our group has previously demonstrated that nanomaterials of
different origin are capable of promoting specific transformation of the amino acid arginine
into the molecule called citrulline27, which can lead ultimately to the
development of autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA)14.
Here, we showed for the first time that exposure to differently processed SWCNTs (in terms
of the chemical treatment applied and functionalities/chemical compounds decorating their
surface) significantly influenced the protein citrullination levels in cultured THP-1 cells
as well as in non-inflammatory lung epithelial cells (Figure 1), thus
suggesting citrullination as an early-stage marker of a novel inflammation-independent
paradigm for SWCNTstoxicity.THP-1 and A549 cells were selected as the most relevant in vitro models for our
study. THP-1 cells were employed to represent the resident phagocytic cells that have the
main function of removing pathogens, senescent cells and external particles from the
lungs2930, while A549 cells represented an in vitro model for lung
alveoli cells, which are not associated with inflammatory responses. A549 cells have been
extensively used for assessing pulmonary cytotoxicity, including nanomaterials-induced
cytotoxicity103132.Our results showed that, following exposure to SWCNTs, high levels of citrullination were
found in cultured A549 cells, as well as in THP-1 cells, independently of the chemical
treatment applied to SWCNTs (Figure 1). Furthermore, we found that,
even if protein citrullination occurred, the cytotoxic (Figure 2) and
inflammatory (Figure 4) cellular responses were significantly lower in
SWCNTs-treated A549 cells than in similarly treated THP-1 cells (Figure
2 and Figure 3, respectively). Similarly to a previous study
published by Hu et al.33, showing that lymphocytes were more sensitive
to SWCNTs as compared to human lung cells, our data proved that phagocytic THP-1 cells were
highly sensitive to all SWCNTs samples (Figure 2), responding to the
SWCNTs exposure with high levels of secreted pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-6)
(Figure 3A and Figure 3B, respectively). In
contrast, A549 cells were only marginally affected by the exposure to the chemically-treated
SWCNTs (Figure 2). Additional analysis of the inflammatory mediators
did not show in fact any significance secretion of TNF-α and IL-6 from A549 cells exposed to
SWCNTs (Figure 4). These results, together with literature data
showing that SWCNTs can lead to the suppression of a variety of inflammatory mediators
(including IL-6) in in vitro lung epithelial cell models34, provide
evidence that SWCNTs could be possibly cytotoxic to lung epithelial cells by activating an
inflammation-independent cellular mechanism. Keeping in mind that citrullination of proteins
is a process distinct from the formation of the free amino acid citrulline as by-product of
oxidative stress enzymes, our results suggest citrullination as a potential early-stage
marker for a novel paradigm of SWCNTs' toxicity.In conclusion, our study showed for the first time that increased increased protein
citrullination can be a potential robust indicator for a novel inflammation-independent
paradigm defining the SWCNTs lung toxicity. Given that exposure to SWCNTs triggered an
inflammatory response of THP-1 cells, including markedly increased levels of secreted
pro-inflammatory cytokines, one could assume that citrullination occurred as a down-stream
process of the inflammatory response to SWCNTs. However, our results in a non-inflammatory,
in vitro cell model (such as A549 cells) showed that protein citrullination was not
necessarily an inflammation-dependent process. In detail, small changes in cytotoxic
cellular responses and low levels of cytokines secretion were associated with relatively
high levels of protein citrullination in A549 cells exposed to five different types of
SWCNTs.Our results strongly advocate for a novel inflammation-independent paradigm of SWCNTstoxicity and the use of citrullination levels as an early-stage indicator for the hazard
ranking of SWCNTs and potentially of nanomaterials, more in general. Further studies are
required to fully explore the mechanism(s) involved in the citrullination induced by
exposure to SWCNTs in vitro and in in vivo correlation studies.
Methods
Materials
Chemicals and solvents were purchased from commercial sources (Sigma-Aldrich, Fisher
Scientific, Invitrogen and Calbiochem). Pristine SWCNTs prepared by laser ablation were
purified and functionalized following the procedure reported in a previous study35 (Figure 5). Briefly, pristine SWCNTs were first
purified (p-SWCNTs) and then functionalized by adding 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenediazonium
tetrafluoroborate, thus obtaining covalently functionalized single-walled carbon nanotubes
(f-SWCNTs). The f-SWCNTs nanotubes were then treated with 4-maleimidobutyric acid
N-hydroxysuccinimide ester, obtaining Mal-SWCNTs. The resulting p-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs and
Mal-SWCNTs derivatives were exposed to a solution of bovine serum albumin (BSA) in
4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (HEPES), thus yielding p-SWCNTs/BSA,
f-SWCNTs/BSA and Mal-SWCNTs/BSA, respectively. Table S23 in the Supporting Information reports a summary of the characterization of the
SWCNTs samples (average atomic force microscopy height measurements, O2 atomic
percentage and zeta potential of SWCNT dispersions in water at pH 7).
Figure 5
Schematic of the purification and covalent functionalization of pristine
SWCNTs.
Boxes highlight the SWCNTs samples tested in this study. Figure adapted from Knyazev
et al.35.
Cell culture
Human lung epithelial (A549) and phagocytic (THP-1) cell lines (ATCC, Manassas, VA, USA)
were cultured in DMEM and RPMI 1640 medium, respectively. Both the media were supplemented
with 10% (v/v) foetal bovine serum (FBS) and 1% (v/v) L-glutamine/penicillin/streptomycin.
Cells were grown in a humidified incubator at 37°C in 5% CO2.
Cell plating and exposure
For experimentation, A549 and THP-1 cells were seeded in 96-well plates at a
concentration of 5,000 and 15,000 cells/well, respectively (Nunc Inc., USA). THP-1 cells
were stimulated with 25 ng/ml of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) for 72 h before
exposure to SWCNTs. THP-1 and A549 cells were exposed to five different samples of
chemically-treated SWCNTs, namely p-SWCNTs, p-SWCNTs/BSA, f-SWCNTs, f-SWCNTs/BSA and
Mal-SWCNTs/BSA. Exposure concentrations ranged from 1 μg/ml to 10 μg/ml (1, 5 and
10 μg/ml).HCSA combines high-resolution digital imaging with powerful software algorithms to
enhance the quantitative data processing. HCSA is currently recognised as the industry
standard for drug screening. Recently, HCSA has also been implemented for the analysis of
cell changes induced by nanomaterials2736373839 since this is the
only contemporary technique which enables to handle large experimental data sets
correlating cell responses to multiple nanomaterials, reagents, concentrations and data
points. HCSA was used to quantify citrullination process and cytotoxic responses following
exposure to SWCNTs.Protein citrullination: Cells were
exposed to SWCNTs for 6 h and 24 h and then fixed using 3% paraformaldehyde (PFA), as
previously described27. After gentle washing with phosphate buffer
solution (PBS), cells were incubated with anti-citrulline antibody (Cat. No: ab6464,
1:200 dilution) for 1 h at room temperature. Cells were washed three times with PBS
and then incubated with FITC-linked goat anti-rabbit antibody for 1 h and stained for
nuclei with Hoechst 33342. Plates were scanned using IN Cell Analyzer 1000 automated
microscope (GE Healthcare, Buckinghamshire, UK). Images were acquired in a stereology
configuration of five randomly selected fields per well at 10× magnification using two
detection channels. Protein citrullination was quantified using the dual area object
analysis module of the IN Cell Investigator software (GE Healthcare, Buckinghamshire,
UK). The module allows for simultaneous quantification of subcellular inclusions that
are marked by different fluorescent labels and measures fluorescence intensity
associated with predefined nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. Cells exposed to
peptidylarginine diminase (PAD) were used as positive control (P/T).Cytotoxicity assay: Following exposure to SWCNTs for 3, 6 and 24 h, a
multiparametric cytotoxicity assay was performed using HCS reagent HitKit™ as per
manufacturer's instructions (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., USA). Briefly, this kit
enable to measure cell viability, cell membrane permeability and lysosomal mass/pH,
which are toxicity-linked cellular markers. The experimental layout for the automated
microscopic analysis, based on the In Cell Analyzer 1000, was composed of untreated
cells (negative control or N/T), cells treated with chemically-modified SWCNTs and
cells exposed to cisplatin (positive control or P/T), which is a platinum-based
cytostatic drug used to treat various types of cancers40. Images were
acquired in a stereology configuration of five randomly selected fields at 10×
magnification using three detection channels with different excitation filters. The
rate of cell viability and proliferation were assessed by the automated analysis of
the nuclear count and morphology (DAPI filter); in parallel the fluorescent staining
intensities reflecting cell permeability (FITC filter) and lysosomal mass/pH changes
(TRITC filter) were also quantified for each individual cell present in the examined
microscopic fields (IN Cell Investigator, GE Healthcare, UK).The expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines (Tumour Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-α) and
Interleukin-6 (IL-6)) expressed by THP-1 and A549 cells exposed to chemically-treated
SWCNTs was quantified by Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays (ELISAs) (Human TNF-α/TNFSF1A
and HumanIL-6 DuoSet ELISA kit, R&D Systems, Minneapolis, USA), according to the
manufacturer's manual. The assays were carried out in duplicates. The optical density of
each well at 450 nm was determined by means of an Epoch microplate reader (Biotek, USA),
calibrated against standards and corrected by subtracting the optical aberration of the
96-well plastic plate at 540 nm. Cells were counted using HCSA and Trypan Blue exclusion
assay in order to quantify the cytokine production as picograms per cell (pg/cell) at the
different exposure concentrations and time points. Cell exposed to LPS were used as
positive control (P/T).
Statistical analysis
A two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by a Bonferroni post-test analysis was
carried out for all HCSA and ELISA assays (Prism; Graph-Pad Software Inc., USA). p
< 0.05 was considered statistically significant. The entire list of p values can
be found as Supplementary Tables S1–S22 online. HCSA and ELISA data,
as well as the protein citrullination results, are presented as mean values
(ntest = 2) ± standard error of the mean and normalized to the negative
control. Due to the large amount of information acquired by HCSA, a data mining and
exploration platform was used (KNIME (http://KNIME.org, 2.0.3) in combination with a HiTS screening module
(http://code.google.com/p/hits
0.3.0) in order to screen and normalize all parameters under investigation as previously
reported27363738. All measured parameters were normalized using the
percentages of the positive controls. Z-score was used for scoring the normalized values.
These scores were summarized using the mean function as follows: Z-score = (x-mean)/SD.
Heatmaps (i.e., graphical illustration in a colorimetric gradient table format) were
adopted as the most suitable schematic representation to report on any statistical
significance and variation from normalized controls based on their Z-score value. Heatmap
tables illustrate the range of variation of each quantified parameter from the minimum
(green), through the mean (yellow), to the maximum (red) value.
Author Contributions
B.M.M. and A.P.-M. conceptualized and planned the study; B.M.M., D.M. and A.P.-M. carried
out HCSA and ELISA experiments, analysed data and wrote the paper; A.K. and D.L. synthesized
the chemically-treated SWCNTs; A.M.D. contributed to the optimization of the HCSA protocols;
A.P.-M. and Y.V. coordinated the study. All authors discussed the results and commented on
the paper.
Authors: Bashir M Mohamed; Navin K Verma; Anthony M Davies; Aoife McGowan; Kieran Crosbie-Staunton; Adriele Prina-Mello; Dermot Kelleher; Catherine H Botting; Corey P Causey; Paul R Thompson; Ger Jm Pruijn; Elena R Kisin; Alexey V Tkach; Anna A Shvedova; Yuri Volkov Journal: Nanomedicine (Lond) Date: 2012-05-25 Impact factor: 5.307