| Literature DB >> 24507464 |
Meike van der Zande1, Rob J Vandebriel, Maria J Groot, Evelien Kramer, Zahira E Herrera Rivera, Kirsten Rasmussen, Jan S Ossenkoppele, Peter Tromp, Eric R Gremmer, Ruud J B Peters, Peter J Hendriksen, Hans J P Marvin, Ron L A P Hoogenboom, Ad A C M Peijnenburg, Hans Bouwmeester.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Synthetic AmorphousEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24507464 PMCID: PMC3922429 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8977-11-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Intended and actual silica exposure doses
| | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAS low | 100 | 222 | 83 | 33 |
| SAS medium | 1000 | 942 | 819 | 328 |
| SAS high | 2500 | 2142 | 2047 | 819 |
| NM-202 low | 100 | 221 | 82 | 82 |
| NM-202 medium | 500 | 537 | 405 | 405 |
| NM-202 high | 1000 | 933 | 810 | 810 |
| Negative control | 0 | 133 | 0 | <21 |
The actual exposure doses were calculated from the (HDC) ICP-MS silicon measurements in the feed mixture (0.95 ± 0.19 mg silica/g), standard feed pellets (1.8 ± 0.9 mg silica/g), and drinking water (0.019 ± 0.003 mg silica/g). Exposure to silica originating from consumption of standard feed pellets and drinking water was based on an average feed intake of 27 g/day and an average water intake of 45 ml/day at an average body weight of 350 g [22] (for a more detailed calculation, see Additional file 1: Table S1). aTotal silica (mg/kg bw/day) – (dose of silica from the standard diet + drinking water in mg/kg bw/day) = dose of added silica (i.e. SAS or NM-202 in mg/kg bw/day). bWith a size of 5 – 200 nm.
Summary of the material properties
| General | Hydrophilic pyrogenica | Hydrophilic pyrogenica |
| Specific surface area | 200 m2/ga | 380 m2/ga |
| Purity | ≥99.9%b | ≥99.8%a |
| Primary particle size | 10-25 nma | 7 nma |
| SEM size distribution | At least 61% of the material was <100 nm.c (Figure | At least 78% of the material was <100 nm.c (Figure |
| XPS | Si: 25.0 ± 0.3 at%b | Si: 29.8 ± 0.5 at% |
| O: 72.1 ± 0.4 at% b | O: 68.1 ± 0.6 at% | |
| C: 2.9 ± 0.6 at% b | C: 2.1 ± 0.6 at% | |
| EDX | Presence of carbon on the surface (Figure | Presence of carbon on the surface (Figure |
| FTIR | Large peak between 1000–1130 cm-1 and a peak at ~800 cm-2 corresponding to Si-O bonds in a pattern characteristic for amorphous fumed silica. | Large peak between 1000–1130 cm-1 and a peak at ~800 cm-2 corresponding to Si-O bonds in a pattern characteristic for amorphous fumed silica. |
| Some C-H stretching vibrations at ~3000 cm-1, indicating the presence of organic material on the surface. | | |
| | ||
| (HDC)-ICP-MS | 79.6 ± 20.7 mg silica/g feed, ~100% between 5–200 nm | 80.5 ± 20.9 mg silica/g feed, ~40% between 5–200 nm |
| SEM-EDX | Presence of carbon on the material surface before and after | Presence of carbon on the material surface before and after |
| Presence of salts ( | Presence of salts ( | |
| (Additional file | (Additional file | |
| | ||
| (HDC)-ICP-MS | 81, 81, 97% (low, medium and high group respectively) of the material has a size between 5–200 nm | 55, 106, 54% (low, medium and high group respectively) of the material has a size between 5–200 nm |
| Dissolution | ~15-20 wt% or less dissolves after | ~15-20 wt% or less dissolves after |
aAs specified by the manufacturer. bReported in ref [23]. cSize limit of detection at 25 nm.
Figure 1Physicochemical characterization of synthetic amorphous silica (SAS) and the OECD representative nano-sized silica (NM-202). SEM micrographs of SAS in (A) water + 0.05% BSA and (B) feed, and of NM-202 in (C) water + 0.05% BSA and (D) feed. (E) SEM size distribution pattern of SAS and NM-202 in water + 0.05% BSA, showing larger sizes for NM-202. The size limit of detection lies at 25 nm. (F) EDX characterization of SAS and NM-202 agglomerates in water containing 0.05% BSA, demonstrating the presence of Si, O, and C on the surface of both materials. The peak representing nickel can be attributed to the nickel coated membrane that was used for sample preparation. (G) FTIR spectra of SAS and NM-202 showing mild C-H stretching vibrations for NM-202 (inset). (H) HDC-ICP-MS chromatogram showing the size distribution and concentration (area under the curve) of nano-sized silica in SAS, NM-202, and in control feed mixtures. (I) The fraction of silica in the nano-size range (i.e. with a size of 5–200 nm; measured by HDC-ICP-MS) given as a percentage of the total silica content (measured by ICP-MS) in the large intestinal (LI) contents, 24 hours after the last exposure (mean ± standard error of the mean; n = 5). * Significant difference versus the control (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Dissolution behavior of SAS and NM-202 after digestion . The content of dissolved silica is given as a weight percentage of the total silica content at concentrations ranging from 50 to 150 μg/ml (n = 6). The dotted lines represent an extrapolated trendline for both samples. LOD: 5 μg SiO2/ml
Figure 3Silica content in organs of animals orally exposed to SAS or NM-202 for 28 days. Silica content was measured by ICP-MS and presented in mg silica/kg tissue (mean ± standard error of the mean; n = 5). * Significant difference versus the control (p < 0.05).
Silica content in tissues in mg silica/kg tissue (mean ± standard error of the mean, n=5) after 84 days of exposure
| Liver | 78 ± 2 | <75 | <75 |
| Kidney | 79 ± 4 | <75 | <75 |
| Spleen | 248 ± 81
| <75 | <75 |
| Brain | 100 ± 23 | <75 | <75 |
| Testis | 105 ± 17 | <75 | 87 ± 12 |
Significant increase versus control, or versus the results from the corresponding group after 28-days of exposure (p<0.05). *Measurements were below the limit of detection and were therefore set at the limit of detection of 75 mg silica/kg tissue.
Figure 4Visco-elastic behavior of SAS and NM-202 in the feed mixture after digestion. Higher storage moduli (G’) of (A) SAS and (C) NM-202 than loss moduli (G”) of (B) SAS and (D) NM-202 (as a function of the strain) indicate increasing gel-like properties, with increasing SiO2 concentrations.
Figure 5Histological images of livers from animals treated with SAS or NM-202 for 28 or 84 days. (A, B) Light microscopic images of an inflammatory granuloma after 84-days of exposure for (A) SAS high dose (magnification: 200x), and (B) NM-202 high dose (magnification: 200x). (C) Apoptosis after 28-days of exposure (SAS low dose, H&E staining; magnification: 200x), and (D) apoptosis after 28-days of exposure (NM-202 high dose; immunohistochemically stained apoptosis; magnification: 200x). (E) Necrosis after 28-days of exposure (NM-202 medium dose; magnification: 25x), and (F, G) fibrosis after 84-days of exposure to the (F) SAS high dose (magnification 100x), and (G) NM-202 high dose (magnification 100x).
Figure 6Histopathological evaluation of livers from animals treated with SAS or NM-202 for 28 or 84 days. (A) The number of mononuclear inflammatory cells (given per cm2) in liver tissue after 28-, or 84-days of exposure (mean ± standard error of the mean; n = 5). (B) The number of apoptotic cells (given per cm2) in liver tissue after 28-, or 84-days of exposure (mean ± standard error of the mean; n = 5). (C) The number of slides (out of a maximum of 10 evaluated slides) in which fibrosis occurred. * Significant difference versus the control at that day.
Figure 7Histological and electron microscopical images from the liver. (A) Light microscopic image of a macrophage (indicated by the circle) in liver tissue from an animal treated with the highest dose of SAS for 84 days, and (B) a corresponding SEM-EDX graph of the same macrophage (indicated by the rectangle) in which (C) the elemental composition was analyzed.
Figure 8Transcriptomic analysis of livers from animals treated with SAS or NM-202 for 84 days. Heatmaps represent gene expression profiles of gene sets related to fibrosis in liver tissue samples after 84-days of exposure. The red and green colours indicate up- or down-regulation of gene expression (2 log expression ratio) for each individual rat in the treatment groups (n = 5) and in the control group (n = 4) versus the average expression of that gene in the control group. Only genes that were up- or downregulated > |1.2x| versus the average control in ≥3 out of the 5 rats were selected. The results indicate up-regulated fibrosis related gene expression in the NM-202 treated animals after 84 days of exposure. Comparison of gene expression in the individual control rats versus the average gene expression of all control rats, indicated that there was a low variation in gene expression within the control group.