| Literature DB >> 24861137 |
L M Skjolding1, K Kern, R Hjorth, N Hartmann, S Overgaard, G Ma, J G C Veinot, A Baun.
Abstract
This study presents a series of short-term studies (total duration 48 h) of uptake and depuration of engineered nanoparticles (ENP) in neonate Daphnia magna. Gold nanoparticles (Au NP) were used to study the influence of size, stabilizing agent and feeding on uptake and depuration kinetics and animal body burdens. 10 and 30 nm Au NP with different stabilizing agents [citrate (CIT) and mercaptoundecanoic acid (MUDA)] were tested in concentrations around 0.5 mg Au/L. Fast initial uptake was observed for all studied Au NP, with CIT stabilized Au NP showing similar rates independent of size and MUDA showing increased uptake for the smaller Au NP (MUDA 10 nm > CIT 10 nm, 30 nm > MUDA 30 nm). However, upon transfer to clean media no clear trend on depuration rates was found in terms of stabilizing agent or size. Independent of stabilizing agent, 10 nm Au NP resulted in higher residual whole-animal body burdens after 24 h depuration than 30 nm Au NP with residual body burdens about one order of magnitude higher of animals exposed to 10 nm Au NP. The presence of food (P. subcapitata) did not significantly affect the body burden after 24 h of exposure, but depuration was increased. While food addition is not necessary to ensure D. magna survival in the presented short-term test design, the influence of food on uptake and depuration kinetics is essential to consider in long term studies of ENP where food addition is necessary. This study demonstrates the feasibility of a short-term test design to assess the uptake and depuration of ENP in D. magna. The findings underlines that the assumptions behind the traditional way of quantifying bioconcentration are not fulfilled when ENPs are studied.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24861137 PMCID: PMC4131140 DOI: 10.1007/s10646-014-1259-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecotoxicology ISSN: 0963-9292 Impact factor: 2.823
Fig. 1TEM images and statistical size distribtution of Au NP in MilliQ water from top: CIT 10 nm Au NP (d = 7.5 ± 3 nm), MUDA 10 nm Au NP (d = 8.0 ± 3 nm), CIT 30 nm Au NP (d = 23.0 ± 9 nm) and MUDA 30 nm Au NP (d = 27.0 ± 6 nm). MUDA mercaptoundecanoic acid, CIT citrate
Size peaks recorded (percentage of particles in this range) and zeta-potential of Au NP in Elendt M7 after 0 and 24 h measured by dynamic light scattering and transformation to volume-based distribution (mean ± standard deviation; n = 3)
| Test compound | Size peak 1 (nm) | Size peak 2 (nm) | Zeta-potential (nm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| t = 0 | t = 24 h | t = 0 | t = 24 h | t = 0 | t = 24 h | |
| MUDAa 10 nm Au NP | 20 ± 5 (71 %) | 229 ± 60 (100 %) | 142 ± 53 (29 %) | N/A | −14 ± 7 | −16 ± 5 |
| MUDAa 30 nm Au NP | 109 ± 42 (82 %) | 279 ± 53 (100 %) | 23 ± 5 (18 %) | N/A | −15 ± 9 | −13 ± 6 |
| Citrate 10 nm Au NP | 14 ± 4 (91 %) | 188 ± 48 (60 %) | 112 ± 47 (9 %) | 20 ± 4 (40 %) | −14 ± 8 | −14 ± 6 |
| Citrate 30 nm Au NP | 225 ± 61 (100 %) | 328 ± 61 (100 %) | N/A | N/A | −14 ± 9 | −16 ± 6 |
N/A No applicable data
aMercaptoundecanoic acid
Results from 24-h D. magna acute toxicity test with Au NP with different stabilizing agents. Effect concentrations and corresponding 95 % confidence intervals are all in mg/L
| Test compound | EC10, 24 h (mg Au/L) | EC10, 48 h (mg Au/L) |
|---|---|---|
| MUDAa 10 nm Au NP | 0.73 (0.07; 2.4) | 0.14 (0.05; 0.25) |
| MUDAa30 nm Au NP | 2.1 (0.49;5.6) | 0.14 (0.0005;0.45) |
| Citrate 30 nm Au NP | >10 | >10 |
aMercaptoundecanoic acid
Fig. 224 h of uptake (diamonds) and depuration (squares) in neonate D. magna during exposure to 0.5 mg Au/L in the uptake phase. The different size and stabilizing agent of the nanoparticles is indicated by the matrix (MUDA mercaptoundecanoic acid). Points denoted asterisk are statistical significantly different from the control (p < 0.05)
Nominal size of particles and stabilizing agent along with modelled uptake and depuration rates, with corresponding R2 and the remaining residual body burden of Au at the end of a 24 h depuration period in clean Elendt M7 media
| Nominal size (nm) | Stabilizing agent | Uptake ratea (L kg−1 dw h−1) | Depuration rate (h−1) | R2 | Residual mass (ng Au/µg dw organism) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | MUDAb | 4,112–27,720 | 0.26 (0.15; 0.37) | 0.81 | 16.1 ± 10.3 |
| 30 | MUDAb | 35–306 | 0.03 (0; 0.11) | 0.68 | 1.2 ± 0.76 |
| 10 | Citrate | 339–2,911 | 0.02 (0; 0.09) | 0.84 | 11.2 ± 3.2 |
| 30 | Citrate | 409–2,275 | 0.10 (0; 0.25) | 0.65 | 1.7 ± 1.0 |
The values in the parentheses denote the 95 % confidence interval with upper and lower boundary
aThe range for the uptake rates were derived from Eq. 1 with the initial water phase concentration (lowest value) and the final water phase concentration (highest value) as input parameters. This was done to accommodate for changes in water concentration during the course of the experiment
bMercaptoundecanoic acid
Fig. 324 h of uptake (diamonds) and depuration (squares) during exposure to 0.4 mg Au/L with and without food during uptake and depuration using 10 nm CIT Au NP for nanoparticle exposure in the uptake phase. For test with feeding during uptake and depuration all values in the depuration phase was below the detection limit. Points denoted asterisk are statistical significantly different from the control (p < 0.05)