| Literature DB >> 25975987 |
Hedwig M Braakhuis1, Samantha K Kloet, Sanja Kezic, Frieke Kuper, Margriet V D Z Park, Susann Bellmann, Meike van der Zande, Séverine Le Gac, Petra Krystek, Ruud J B Peters, Ivonne M C M Rietjens, Hans Bouwmeester.
Abstract
The increasing use of nanoparticles in products likely results in increased exposure of both workers and consumers. Because of their small size, there are concerns that nanoparticles unintentionally cross the barriers of the human body. Several in vivo rodent studies show that, dependent on the exposure route, time, and concentration, and their characteristics, nanoparticles can cross the lung, gut, skin, and placental barrier. This review aims to evaluate the performance of in vitro models that mimic the barriers of the human body, with a focus on the lung, gut, skin, and placental barrier. For these barriers, in vitro models of varying complexity are available, ranging from single-cell-type monolayer to multi-cell (3D) models. Only a few studies are available that allow comparison of the in vitro translocation to in vivo data. This situation could change since the availability of analytical detection techniques is no longer a limiting factor for this comparison. We conclude that to further develop in vitro models to be used in risk assessment, the current strategy to improve the models to more closely mimic the human situation by using co-cultures of different cell types and microfluidic approaches to better control the tissue microenvironments are essential. At the current state of the art, the in vitro models do not yet allow prediction of absolute transfer rates but they do support the definition of relative transfer rates and can thus help to reduce animal testing by setting priorities for subsequent in vivo testing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25975987 PMCID: PMC4551544 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-015-1518-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Fig. 1A Schematic illustration of the skin and main penetration routes, insert showing the lipid bilayers between corneocytes. Route A: across the lipid bilayers (intercellular route); Route B: across the corneocytes and lipid bilayers (intracellular route); Route C: along hair follicles and sweat glands
Fig. 2Schematic illustration of the placental barrier as a cross section of a human placental villus. The placental barrier consists of two layers: the syncytiotrophoblast and cytotrophoblast, the latter forming a discontinuous layer. The basal plasma membrane (BM) of the syncytiotrophoblast is oriented towards the foetal circulation, while the maternal-facing microvillous plasma membrane (MVM) faces the maternal blood compartment
Fig. 3Two-compartment cell culture system contains a permeable cell culture insert, separating two compartments in a Transwell. Cells are seeded and cultured on the inserts to form a barrier between the two compartments
Overview of in vitro models used to study translocation of nanoparticles
| Model | Nanoparticles | Conclusion on barrier function | References |
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| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, MDM: monocyte-derived macrophages, MDDC: monocyte-derived dendritic cells | 15-nm gold at the air–liquid interface | Translocation rate of 5.2 % (±4.8 %) at 4 h and 5.2 % (±5.6 %) at 24 h for 561 ng/cm2 and 0.5 % (±0.3 %) at 4 h and 3.95 (±3.9 %) at 24 h for 61 ng/cm2 | Brandenberger et al. ( |
| 16HBE14o-: human bronchial epithelial cell line, HUVEC: human umbilical vein endothelial cells | No nanoparticles used | 16HBE14o- cells form tight junctions. The barrier function is highest in biculture compared with monocultures. Increased TEER correlated with increased occludin mRNA. Cells migrated trough inserts with 1.0-µm pores but not through inserts with 0.4-µm pores | Chowdhury et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line | 40- and 200-nm carboxylated polystyrene nanoparticles | Nanoparticles entered cells via active energy-dependent processes. Uptake was inhibited after microtubule disruption and treatment with genistein | dos Santos et al. ( |
| RAECM: rat alveolar epithelial cell monolayers | 5.3-nm quantum dots (CdSe/ZnS) with amino-conjugated, carboxylated, or non-modified surfaces | Quantum dots do not injure RAECM, and quantum dot trafficking does not appear to take place via endocytic pathways involving caveolin, clathrin, or dynamin. Translocation of quantum dots occurs both transcellularly and paracellularly | Fazlollahi et al. ( |
| NCI-H292: human bronchial epithelial cell line, Calu-3: human bronchial epithelial cell line, A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line | 50-nm fluorescent silica nanoparticles | Calu-3 cells form tight junctions. Translocation of silica nanoparticles was 3 % in the Calu-3 cells, 9 % in the NCI-H292 cells, and 35 % in the A549 cells (cells seeded on inserts with 3.0-µm pores). The high translocation rate in A549 cells is caused by their inability to form a tight barrier | George et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, Calu-3: human bronchial epithelial cell line | 46-nm fluorescent carboxylated and amino-conjugated polystyrene nanoparticles | Calu-3 and primary type II cells show a high TEER, whereas A549 do not. Acellular translocation of carboxylated particles was 13.5 % through inserts with 0.4-µm pores and 67.5 % through 3-µm pores. Acellular translocation of amino-conjugated particles was 4.2 % through 0.4-µm pores and 52.7 % through 3-µm pores. Calu-3 and primary type II cells showed no translocation of particles in inserts with 0.4-µm pore size. Calu-3 cells showed about 6 % translocation with 3.0-µm pore size. A549 cells were not tested because of their low TEER | Geys et al. ( |
| Primary rat alveolar epithelial cells | Quantum dots with amino-conjugated, carboxylated, or non-modified surfaces | No translocation after 24-h exposure. Disruption of the epithelial barrier causes translocation, indicative for paracellular transport | Geys et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, NCI H441: human lung epithelial cell line, HPMEC: primary human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells | No nanoparticles used. Sodium fluorescein used as permeability marker | H441 form tight junctions, A549 not. H441 showed reduced permeability compared with A549 | Hermanns et al. ( |
| NCI H441: human lung epithelial cell line, A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, E10: microvascular endothelial cells | 20-nm fluorescent polystyrene amino-conjugated nanoparticles | Physiological breathing motions increased nanoparticle transport across the lung barrier | Huh et al. ( |
| Calu-3: human bronchial epithelial cell line | Fluorescent poly(vinyl alcohol) nanoparticles | Calu-3 cells internalized up to 11 % of the applied nanoparticles. The maximum translocated fraction was 1.3 % in 14 h | Madlova et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, MDM: monocyte-derived macrophages | 15–300-nm diesel exhaust particles | All cell types internalized the different particles | Muller et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, cultured at the air–liquid interphase | 9-nm cerium dioxide nanoparticles | 35 % of the particles were internalized at 10 min after exposure, which increased to 60 % at 30 min and 80 % at 24 h after exposure | Raemy et al. ( |
| A549: human type II alveolar epithelial cell line, MDM: monocyte-derived macrophages, MDDC: monocyte-derived dendritic cells | 20–30-nm anatase titanium dioxide nanoparticles | Titanium dioxide nanoparticles were found in all cell types as bigger membrane-bound aggregates and as single particles and smaller aggregates that were not membrane bound | Rothen-Rutishauser et al. ( |
| RAECM: rat alveolar epithelial cell monolayers | 20- and 100-nm carboxylated, sulphated, or aldehyde-sulphated and amino-conjugated polystyrene nanoparticles | Translocation was 20–40 times faster for positively charged particles compared with negatively charged particles of the same size. Translocation decreased with increasing particle size: 20-nm particles were transported about 3 times faster compared with 100-nm particles | Yacobi et al. ( |
| 3D human airway model, cultured at air–liquid interface | 13.8-nm cerium dioxide; inverse agglomeration size in 3D medium with dose | Droplet exposure: translocation showed inverse dose–response when expressed as percentage of dose applied | Frieke Kuper et al. ( |
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| Caco-2 and MTX-E12 monolayers | Hydrophobic polystyrene, bioadhesive chitosan, and stealth PLA-PEG nanoparticles | Mucus is presenting a major barrier for hydrophobic polystyrene NP and chitosan. Chitosan NP seemed to be taken up by adsorptive transcystosis polystyrene NP via non-adsorptive transcystosis | Behrens et al. ( |
| Caco-2 +M cells | Ag nanoparticles 20, 30, 60, 110 nm | Study focussed on gene expression. No Ag NP-specific differential gene expression was noted. Very limited (1 %) translocation | Bouwmeester et al. ( |
| Caco-2 | Latex 2 µm particles | In vivo uptake after early time points after single dose at villous and not Peyer’s patch. While M cell model has looser tight junctions than Caco-2 cells, uptake level of particles is comparable | Carr et al. ( |
| Caco-2 + M cells (Raji) | Carboxylated latex nanoparticles 200 nm | 50-fold higher translocation in co-cultures (8.0e−4 % transported) compared with monocultures | des Rieux et al. ( |
| Caco-2 + M cells | 200-nm and 500-nm polystyrene nanoparticles carboxylated or amino-conjugated | Amino-conjugated 200-nm nanoparticles were translocated more (0.002 %) than carboxylated nanoparticles. Absence of serum resulted in increased translocation. 500-nm nanoparticles were not translocated | (des Rieux et al. |
| Caco-2 cell rat ileum (ex vivo), and systemic biodistribution after oral gavage | Rhodamine-B-labelled carboxylated chitosan grafted nanoparticles (RhB-CCNP) (300, 600, and 1000 nm) and similar Zeta potentials (−35 mV) | RhB-CCNP-BSA with smaller sizes (300 nm) demonstrated elevated intestinal absorption, compared with the others | He et al. ( |
| Caco-2 + HT29-MTX | Insulin-loaded chitosan nanoparticles | CSK peptide modification showed enhanced transport. The presence of mucus increased the translocation of both modified and unmodified nanoparticles | Jin et al. ( |
| Caco-2 + M cells | Chitosan-DNA nanoparticles | Ligand decoration has the most dramatic effect on the transcytosis rate: transferrin modification enhances transport through both models by three- to fivefold. Transport through the M cell co-culture model is fivefold that of the intestinal epithelial monolayer, with at least 80 % of the chitosan-DNA nanoparticles taken up in the first 30 min | Kadiyala et al. ( |
| Caco-2 + HT29-MTX + M cells | 50- and 200-nm polystyrene nanoparticles, carboxylated, amino-conjugated, or plain | Co-exposure of monolayers to either 50 or 200-nm nanoparticles and iron-ascorbate solution resulted in increased translocation of iron 50-nm NPS translocated equal in both co- (Caco and HT29) and triculture models. 200-nm nanoparticles translocated significantly more in tri cultures, only at 37 °C at 37 and 4 °C | Mahler et al. ( |
| Caco-2 | Polyelectrolyte complex nanoparticles of spermine (SPM) with polyacrylic acid (PAA) polymer | Permeation enhancing effects following exposure to nanoparticles were associated with a reversible decrease in TEER values, suggesting a paracellular permeation pathway by reversible opening of the tight junctions | Makhlof et al. ( |
| Caco-2 with and without HT29-MTX with and without M cells | 50- and 100-nm polystyrene nanoparticles, carboxylated, amino-conjugated, or plain | The incorporation of mucus in the model reduced the translocation of 50-nm nanoparticles compared with Caco-2 only. The incorporation of M cells resulted in a translocation levels close to those as observed for the monoculture. The surface charge of the NP was very important for the (changes) in translocation in the different models. 100-nm nanoparticles were translocated at a very low level | Walczak et al. ( |
| Caco-2 with HT29-MTX coupled to in vitro digestion | 50 polystyrene nanoparticles, carboxylated, amino-conjugated, or plain | Incubation of the nanoparticles in the in vitro digestion model resulted in increased translocation levels compared with ‘non-digested’ nanoparticles | Walczak et al. ( |
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| Hydrodynamic size of 130-nm slices exposed for 2 h to 50 μg/ml | Local Ti spots in tissues were observed, increased permeability of 4 kDa dextran after Ti NP exposure. No Ti translocation could be detected | Brun et al. ( |
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| 50- and 200-nm polystyrene nanoparticles exposed for 4 h to 100 μg/ml | Entrapment of nanoparticles in superficial part of the tissue was observed. Translocation not determined | Schimpel et al. ( |
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| Full thickness human skin, handmade vertical diffusion cell | Fe oxide, <10 nm | Nanoparticles were able to penetrate into viable skin layers | Baroli ( |
| Human, previously frozen and viable skin, Franz diffusion cell | Au 6 and 15 nm | 6-nm gold nanoparticles in toluene penetrated into epidermal layers of human skin | Labouta et al. ( |
| Porcine skin, home-made static diffusion cell | TiO2, >50–100 nm | TiO2 was not able to penetrate into viable skin layers even when the skin was previously compromised by physical or mechanical constrains and/or solar radiation | Miquel-Jeanjean et al. ( |
| Porcine skin, flow-through diffusion cell | TiO2 and ZnO 60–200 nm present in the sunscreen formulation | UVB-sunburned skin enhanced penetration of the TiO2 or ZnO NP. TiO2 and ZnO NP penetrated into the viable skin layers but not in receptor fluid | Monteiro-Riviere et al. ( |
| Full thickness human skin, Franz and flow-through diffusion cell | Quantum dots 13–29 nm with different surface modifications | Differences in penetration depended on the surface coatings of the NP. No penetration at the physiological pH, but at slightly basic pH, nanoparticles did penetrate into viable skin layers | Prow et al. ( |
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| BeWo b30 Transwell model | Dexamethasone-loaded poly( | Transport across the placental barrier of dexamethasone-loaded PLGA nanoparticles was influenced by size | Ali et al. ( |
| BeWo b30 Transwell model | Polystyrene nanoparticles 50 and 100 nm (Fluoresbrite; Polysciences) | 3.5 % (50 nm) and 0.6 % (100 nm) of the initial amount added to the apical chamber was found in the basal chamber after 24 h | Cartwright et al. ( |
| BeWo b30 Transwell model | Iron oxide and silica nanoparticles (23–38 nm) | Nanomegnetite Na-oleate-coated (OC-Fe3O4) and Fluorescent rhodamine-labelled silica (Fl-SiO2) nanoparticles are able to cross the BeWo b30 barrier. Fl-SiO2 transport (24-29%) after 6 h was unaffected by size | Correia Carreira et al. ( |
| BeWo b30 Transwell model | Polystyrene nanoparticles of 50 nm | Limited transport (3-15%) of 50 nm polystyrene nanoparticles with positive and negative charge after 24 h. 24 h Papp value: 0.3 × 10−6 cm/s (amino-conjugated polystyrene-NP); 13 × 10−6 cm/s (carboxylated polystyrene-NP) | Kloet et al. (personal communication) |
| BeWo (ATCC clone) Transwell model | PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10–30 nm | Internalisation of PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10 nm in BeWo cells up to 48 h after exposure as analysed by TEM | Myllynen et al. ( |
| BeWo b30 Transwell model | Rhodamine labeled silica nanoparticles of 25 nm | Limited transport of 25 nm silica nanoparticles | Sonnegaard Poulsen et al. ( |
| Ex vivo human placenta perfusion model | PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10–30 nm | No detection of PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10–15 nm on fetal side | Myllynen et al. ( |
| Ex vivo human placenta perfusion model | Polystyrene (polystyrene) 50, 240 nm (Kisker GbR, Steinfurt, Germany). 80, 500 nm (Polyscience Europe GmbH, Eppelheim, Germany) | polystyrene beads up to a diameter of 240 nm were taken up by the placenta and able to cross the placental barrier | Wick et al. ( |
| Ex vivo human placenta | PAMAM dendrimers of 5–6 nm | PAMAM dendrimers of 5-6 nm crossed the perfused human placenta in relatively small amounts within 6 h | Menjoge et al. ( |
| Ex vivo human placenta perfusion model | Fluorescently labelled polystyrene particles with sizes of 80 and 500 nm | The 80 nm particles were able to cross the placental barrier and provide a perfect example for a substance which is transferred across the placenta to the foetus while the 500 nm particles were retained in the placental tissue or maternal circuit | Grafmuller et al. ( |
| Ex vivo human placenta perfusion model | Ex vivo human placenta perfusion model | 4.2 and 4.6 % for 25 and 50 nm silica nanoparticles reached the fetal perfusate after 6 h | Sonnegaard Poulsen et al. ( |
Fig. 4In vitro diffusion chamber to test bioavailability of nanoparticles across the skin barrier
Comparison in vitro and in vivo translocation of nanoparticles
| Nanoparticle | In vivo study design | In vivo translocation | In vitro study design | In vitro translocation | Comparison | References |
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| Polystyrene | Single oral administration of 50-nm nanoparticles with different surface modifications | Oral bioavailability was estimated to range between 1.7 and 0.2 % of administered dose. Not all tissues were harvested | Monolayers of co-cultures of Caco-2 and or HT29-MTX were exposed to nanoparticles for 24 h | Translocation was determined to the basolateral compartment. Translocation ranged between 12.3 and 1.6 % | The same nanoparticles were used in these studies. Duration of exposure was different. The in vitro models overestimated the estimated in vivo bioavailability | Walczak et al. ( |
| TiO2 | Hydrodynamic size of 130-nm single oral gavage to 12.5 mg/kg of TiO2 nanoparticles dispersed in 150 μl of water | After 6 h tissues were harvested, Ti was detected in gut tissues but very low and could not be quantified due to the limit of detection of the used methods (1-2 ppm in μXRF) | Monolayers of Caco-2, and or HT29-MTX and or M cells were exposed to 50 μg/mL TiO2 nanoparticles for 48 h | TiO2 could not pass the polyester membranes | Both in vivo and in vitro experiments indicated translocation of TiO2. Due to low sensitivity of the detection techniques this could not be quantified | Brun et al. ( |
| TiO2 | Single oral administration of 18-nm TiO2 at a dose of 100 mg/kg | After 24 h tissues (including small intestine and caecum), but no increased in Ti levels were observed | Monolayers of Caco-2 cells were exposed to 100 μg/ml TiO2 NPs for 48 h | Translocation at the limit of detection was observed (i.e. 0.1 ppm, equivalent to 0.4 % translocation) |
| Janer et al. ( |
| TiO2 | Rats were exposed to a single dose of 5 mg/kg different types of TiO2 (mean particle size 40 nm, 40-50 nm, 120 nm, and up to 5 um) | Up to 96 h post-administration no translocation of Ti was detected to blood, several organs, and urine | Monolayers of Caco-2 and M cells were exposed for 24 h to 250 μg/ml TiO2 nanoparticles | No translocation could be detected | No translocation could be detected | MacNicoll et al. ( |
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| Silver | Intratracheal instillation in ICR mice of AgNO3 or silver nanoparticles of 20 nm | After 4 h, 7 % of the initial dose of Ag was recovered in the liver in AgNO3-treated mice, and only a trace amount of Ag was detected in the liver in Ag nanoparticles-treated mice. The concentration of Ag in the lung tissue was significantly higher in the Ag nanoparticles-treated mice compared with the AgNO3-treated mice | J774.1 murine macrophage cells exposed to AgNO3 or silver nanoparticles of 20 nm, 60 nm, and 100 nm for 24 h | Both AgNO3 and Ag nanoparticles were taken up by J774.1 cells. Ag in the AgNO3-treated cells was bound to metallothioneins, whereas Ag in the Ag nanoparticles-treated cells was not. The Ag nanoparticles were agglomerated and accumulated in the lysosomes. Uptake was not quantified | In vivo, Ag ions appeared to translocate from the lungs to other tissues rapidly. | Arai et al. ( |
| Multi-walled carbon nanotubes | Oropharyncheal aspiration in C57BL6 mice of uncoated and aluminium-coated MWCNT of 0.5–40 µm length | MWCNT-containing macrophages were found in the alveolar region and around the airways of the lower lung. Tissue distribution was not measured | THP-1 human macrophages and primary human monocytes were exposed to uncoated and aluminium oxide-coated MWCNT for 24 h | Both coated and uncoated MWCNT were taken up by THP-1 cells. Uptake was not quantified and no translocation measured | Both in vivo and in vitro, MWCNTs are taken up by alveolar macrophages | Taylor et al. ( |
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| Titanium dioxide | Pig skin exposed for 48 h to coated TiO2 particles 14–16 nm | Most of Ti found in the upper layers of the stratum corneum, however, slight Ti above background has been found in the epidermis and superficial papillary dermis. The levels of TiO2 were higher in UV-treated skin | Porcine skin, flow-through diffusion cell, exposure duration 24 h | TiO2 remains mainly in the stratum corneum. Although TiO2 nanoparticles have been detected in the epidermis and dermis, there was no penetration into receptor fluid | Both in vitro and in vivo show that the penetrated TiO2 resided primarily in the upper layers of the stratum corneum, although slight penetration into viable layers occurred | Monteiro-Riviere et al. ( |
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| Gold | Ex vivo human placental model exposed to PEGylated gold nanoparticles for 1 or 6 h | PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10, 15, and 30 nm were not observed in the foetal part of the placenta | BeWo cells exposed to PEGylated gold nanoparticles | Internalization of PEGylated gold nanoparticles of 10 nm in BeWo cells up to 48 h after exposure as analysed by TEM | In vitro, there was internalization of gold nanoparticles in cells of the placenta, while ex vivo no gold nanoparticles were observed in the foetal part of the placenta | Myllynen et al. ( |
The table shows studies in which similar nanoparticles are tested both in vivo and in vitro