| Literature DB >> 27335757 |
Yue Zhang1, Wan-Xi Yang1.
Abstract
Since nanoparticles are now widely applied as food additives, in cosmetics and other industries, especially in medical therapy and diagnosis, we ask here whether nanoparticles can cause several adverse effects to human health. In this review, based on research on nanotoxicity, we mainly discuss the negative influence of nanoparticles on blood vessels in several aspects and the potential mechanism for nanoparticles to penetrate endothelial layers of blood vessels, which are the sites of phosphorylation of tight junction proteins (claudins, occludins, and ZO (Zonula occludens)) proteins, oxidative stress and shear stress. We propose a connection between the presence of nanoparticles and the regulation of the tight junction, which might be the key approach for nanoparticles to penetrate endothelial layers and then have an impact on other tissues and organs.Entities:
Keywords: blood vessels; endothelial cells; nanoparticles; oxidative stress; tight junction
Year: 2016 PMID: 27335757 PMCID: PMC4902068 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.7.60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Side effects of NPs.
| type of NPs | size | experimental target | treatment | effects | ref. |
| Au | 30 nm | pregnant mice | intravenous injection | emphysema-like changes in lungs | [ |
| Au | 5.3 ± 1 nm | exposed in tanks for 24 h in vivo | cause oxidative stress in | [ | |
| Au | 22 nm | human oral squamous cell carcinoma (HSC-3) | exposure to extracellular, cytoplasm, and nuclear localized AuNPs and AgNPs | decline in intracellular ATP; reduce HSC-3 cell viability; increased apoptotic population | [ |
| Au | 10 nm × 39 nm, 10 nm × 41 nm, 10 nm × 45 nm | human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial; human gastric adenocarcinoma cells; mouse embryonic fibroblast; porcine kidney; African green monkey kidney; human normal lung tissue | cell-impedance measurement system; monitoring platform; evaluation of cytotoxic effects with traditional in vitro assays | induce signaling and gene expression to regulate responses in cells | [ |
| Ag | 5–35 nm | — | induced dose-dependent developmental defects: delayed development, bodily asymmetry, shortened or irregular arms and behavioral changes | [ | |
| Ag | — | calf thymus DNA | — | alter the conformation of DNA; bind DNA groove | [ |
| Ag | 50 nm, 3 μm, 30 μm | osteoclasts (OC) and osteoblasts (OB) cultures | murine osteoclasts (OC) and osteoblasts (OB) exposed to silver particles | dose-dependent cytotoxic effects on OB and OC in vitro | [ |
| Cu | 15 nm | adult mouse podocytes | treated with different concentrations of nano-Cu | increase oxidative stress; cause podocyte apoptosis | [ |
| Cu | 204 ± 1 nm | epithelial kidney cells of frog | exposed to CuO particles of three different sizes | cause DNA damage, decrease cell viability and levels of reduced glutathione (GSH) and eventually cell death | [ |
| Cu–Zn alloy | — | human lung epithelial cells | — | induce chromosomal damage and intracellular ROS formation | [ |
Figure 1The effects of the phosphorylation process and other processes on the tight junction and its core proteins. For more details see main text.
Oxidative stress caused by NPs in different cells and tissues.
| type of NPs | size | experimental target | effects | ref. |
| Fe2O3 | 50 nm | human hepatoma Hep G2 cells | concentration-dependent increase of intracellular ROS generation after 12 and 24 h of exposure | [ |
| SO-Fe3O | 44 nm | human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial cell | significant ROS level in cells for the 24 h treatment interval | [ |
| ZnO (rod-shape) | 15.38 ± 1.47 nm (width); 82.34 ± 14.23 nm (length) | mouse skin epidermal normal cells | time-dependent ROS generation after treatment for 24, 48 and 72 h | [ |
| CdS QDs | 5–10 nm | mussel hemocytes, mussel gill cells | in hemocytes: increased ROS production with 5 mg Cd/L; in gill cells ROS production was induced with 1.25 mg Cd/L showing time-dependent behavior | [ |
| Si/SiO2 QDs | 3–4 nm | human fetal lung fibroblast cell line | increase of ROS due to the exposure of Si/SiO2 QDs | [ |