| Literature DB >> 27544212 |
Chiranjib Chakraborty1, Ashish Ranjan Sharma2, Garima Sharma2, Sang-Soo Lee3.
Abstract
Presently, nanotechnology is a multi-trillion dollar business sector that covers a wide range of industries, such as medicine, electronics and chemistry. In the current era, the commercial transition of nanotechnology from research level to industrial level is stimulating the world's total economic growth. However, commercialization of nanoparticles might offer possible risks once they are liberated in the environment. In recent years, the use of zebrafish (Danio rerio) as an established animal model system for nanoparticle toxicity assay is growing exponentially. In the current in-depth review, we discuss the recent research approaches employing adult zebrafish and their embryos for nanoparticle toxicity assessment. Different types of parameters are being discussed here which are used to evaluate nanoparticle toxicity such as hatching achievement rate, developmental malformation of organs, damage in gill and skin, abnormal behavior (movement impairment), immunotoxicity, genotoxicity or gene expression, neurotoxicity, endocrine system disruption, reproduction toxicity and finally mortality. Furthermore, we have also highlighted the toxic effect of different nanoparticles such as silver nanoparticle, gold nanoparticle, and metal oxide nanoparticles (TiO2, Al2O3, CuO, NiO and ZnO). At the end, future directions of zebrafish model and relevant assays to study nanoparticle toxicity have also been argued.Entities:
Keywords: Animal model; Nanoparticle; Toxicity; Zebrafish
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27544212 PMCID: PMC4992559 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-016-0217-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 10.435
Fig. 1Increasing trend in the publications in zebrafish research (2007–2015). Keyword (“nano” and “zebrafish”) searched was performed from PUBMED, NCBI database. Search was conducted on 14th July 2016
Fig. 2Schematic diagram describes—the different stages of zebrafish development and their relevancy for nanotoxicity study
Different types of transgenic zebrafish used to the nanoparticle/chemical toxicity study
| Nanoparticle/chemicals used | Transgenic zebrafish type that is used to understand the nanoparticle toxicity | Remark | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | TiO2, SiO2, CuO | Transgenic (nacre/fli1:EGFP) zebrafish | Transgenic fish exposed to TiO2,SiO2, CuO particles with a concentration of 0.01, 1 and 100 μg/ml concentrations and noted that CuO nanoparticles inhibit vasculogenesis | [ |
| 2. | TiO2, C60(OH)24) (hydroxylated fullerenes/) | Gene expression of zebrafish embryos | Circadian rhythm gene/(s) deregulated by nanoparticles | [ |
| 3. | TiO(2) | ARE transgenic zebrafish | Exposure TiO(2) nanoparticle cause death of zebrafish embryos | [ |
| 4. | Small molecules | Transgenic embryos expressing green fluorescent protein in myocardium | Small molecule alter in heart rate of transgenic embryos | [ |
| 5. | Metal oxide nanoparticles such as CuO, ZnO, NiO, and Co(3)O(4)) | hsp70:eGFP transgenic zebrafish larvae | CuO, ZnO, and NiO may augmented expression of hsp70:eGFP in transgenic zebrafish larvae | [ |
| 6. | Inorganic nanorods | Transgenic (fli1a:EGFP) zebrafish embryos | This study noted that—ROS mediated angiogenesis in transgenic zebrafish embryo using inorganic nanorods | [ |
| 7. | Cadmium selenium (CdSe) quantum dots (QDs) coated with mercaptopropionic acid (MPA) | FLI-1 transgenic zebrafish larvae | abnormal vascularization occoured in transgenic zebrafish larvae | [ |
| 8 | Mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNPs) | lysC:DsRED2 transgenic embryos | It can be used to deliver bioactive compounds | [ |