| Literature DB >> 24027766 |
Amruta Manke1, Liying Wang, Yon Rojanasakul.
Abstract
The rapidly emerging field of nanotechnology has offered innovative discoveries in the medical, industrial, and consumer sectors. The unique physicochemical and electrical properties of engineered nanoparticles (NP) make them highly desirable in a variety of applications. However, these novel properties of NP are fraught with concerns for environmental and occupational exposure. Changes in structural and physicochemical properties of NP can lead to changes in biological activities including ROS generation, one of the most frequently reported NP-associated toxicities. Oxidative stress induced by engineered NP is due to acellular factors such as particle surface, size, composition, and presence of metals, while cellular responses such as mitochondrial respiration, NP-cell interaction, and immune cell activation are responsible for ROS-mediated damage. NP-induced oxidative stress responses are torch bearers for further pathophysiological effects including genotoxicity, inflammation, and fibrosis as demonstrated by activation of associated cell signaling pathways. Since oxidative stress is a key determinant of NP-induced injury, it is necessary to characterize the ROS response resulting from NP. Through physicochemical characterization and understanding of the multiple signaling cascades activated by NP-induced ROS, a systemic toxicity screen with oxidative stress as a predictive model for NP-induced injury can be developed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24027766 PMCID: PMC3762079 DOI: 10.1155/2013/942916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
List of studies describing the ROS-dependent effects of metal-based NP.
| Nanoparticles | ROS-dependent effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Iron oxide | ||
| Iron oxide | Necrosis and apoptosis in murine macrophage (J774) cells | [ |
| Zero-valent iron | Acute cytotoxicity in human bronchial epithelial cells | [ |
| Iron oxide | Human microvascular endothelial cell permeability | [ |
| SPIONS | Activation of NF- | [ |
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| Copper oxide | ||
| Copper oxide | Genotoxicity in human lung epithelial cells | [ |
| Copper oxide | Mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative DNA damage, cell death in A549 cell line | [ |
| Copper oxide | Cytotoxicity | [ |
| Copper oxide | Nephrotoxicity and hepatotoxicity | [ |
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| Cerium oxide | ||
| Cerium oxide | Lung inflammation and alveolar macrophage apoptosis | [ |
| Cerium oxide | Apoptosis via caspase-3 activation and chromatin condensation | [ |
| Cerium oxide | HO-1 induction via the p38-Nrf-2 signaling pathway | [ |
| Cerium oxide | Lipid peroxidation and membrane damage | [ |
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| Zinc oxide | ||
| Zinc oxide | Mitochondrial dysfunction, morphological modification, and apoptosis | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Cellular oxidant injury, excitation of inflammation, and cell death in BEAS-2B and RAW 264.7 cells | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Mitochondrial damage, apoptosis, and IL-8 release | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Mitochondrial damage, genotoxic and apoptotic cell effects | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Genotoxic and apoptotic responses | [ |
| Zinc oxide | Endoplasmic reticulum stress, apoptosis, and necrosis in rat retinal ganglion cells | [ |
| Zinc oxide nanorods | Apoptosis in human alveolar adenocarcinoma cells via p53, surviving, and bax/bcl-2 pathways | [ |
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| Nanosilica | ||
| Nanosilica | Cytotoxicity and apoptosis via activation of p53 and Bax | [ |
| Nanosilica | Cell cycle arrest and apoptosis | [ |
| Nanosilica | Hepatotoxicity | [ |
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| Nickel oxide | ||
| Nickel oxide | Lipid peroxidation, apoptosis | [ |
| Nickel ferrite | Apoptosis in A549 cells through oxidative stress via p53, survivin, bax/bcl-2, and caspase pathways in normal Chang (normal human liver), MCF10A (normal breast epithelial), and WI38 (normal lung fibroblast) cell lines | [ |
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| Titanium dioxide | ||
| Titanium dioxide | Apoptotic cell death through ROS-mediated Fas upregulation and Bax activation | [ |
| Titanium dioxide | Cytotoxic and genotoxic effects | [ |
| Titanium dioxide | Cytotoxicity and apoptotic cell death | [ |
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| Aluminum oxide | ||
| Aluminium oxide | Mitochondria mediated oxidative stress and cytotoxicity in human mesenchymal stem cells | [ |
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| Gold | ||
| Gold | Lipid peroxidation and autophagy | [ |
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| Silver | ||
| Ag-NP | Mitochondrial damage and genotoxicity in human lung fibroblast cells (IMR-90) and human glioblastoma cells (U251) | [ |
| Ag-NP | JNK-mediated mitochondrial apoptosis in NIH3T3 fibroblasts | [ |
| Ag-NP | Mitochondrial damage, apoptosis | [ |
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| Cobalt-chromium (Co-Cr) | ||
| Co-Cr NP | Oxidative DNA damage, micronuclei induction, reduced cell viability in human dermal fibroblasts | [ |
List of studies describing the ROS-dependent effects of CNT.
| CNT | ||
|---|---|---|
| SWCNT with 30% iron by mass | Lipid peroxidation, reduced cell viability, and antioxidant reserve in human keratinocytes | [ |
| Acid treated MWCNTs with Co and Ni | Decreased cell viability, altered mitochondrial membrane potential in rat macrophages (NR8383) and human A549 lung cells | [ |
| SWCNT | Reduced cell viability and antioxidant reserve in rat lung epithelial cells | [ |
| SWCNT | Increased apoptosis, DNA damage, activated MAPKs, AP-1, NF- | [ |
| SWCNT | Reduced cell proliferation, activation of NF- | [ |
| Unpurified SWCNT (30% w/w iron) | Activation of AP-1 and NF- | [ |
| Unpurified SWCNT (17.7% w/w iron) | Lipid peroxidation, acute inflammatory response, decreased respiratory function in adult C57BL/6 mice | [ |
| Raw MWCNT | Dose-dependent cytotoxicity in RAW 264.7 macrophages and A549 cells: cell inflammation, membrane leakage, lipid peroxidation, and protein release | [ |
| MWCNT | Increase in cell permeability, cell migration, and endothelial permeability in human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC) | [ |
| SWCNT | Activation of p38 MAPK in CNT mediated fibrogenic and angiogenic responses | [ |
| MWCNT | Activation of NF- | [ |
Figure 1Prooxidant pathway for NP-induced toxicity: various NP exhibit oxidative stress dependent toxicity. Upon NP exposure, ROS generation is capable of inducing oxidative DNA damage, strand breaks, protein denaturation, and lipid peroxidation thereby demonstrating the mutagenic and carcinogenic characteristics associated with NP. Excess free radical production leads to mitochondrial membrane damage causing necrosis and cell death. Phagocytes including neutrophils and macrophages generate massive ROS upon incomplete phagocytosis of NP through the NADPH-oxidase enzyme system whereas NP-induced ROS triggers an inflammatory cascade of chemokine and cytokine expression via activation of cell signaling pathways such as MAPK, NF-κB, Akt, and RTK. Furthermore, oxidative stress mediated stimulation of these cellular mechanisms results in transcription of genes responsible for fibrosis, EMT, and carcinogenesis. NP-elicited ROS is at the center stage for majority of the ensuing adverse outcomes.