| Literature DB >> 27699444 |
Abstract
KEY MESSAGES: Particle sizes of E 551 products are in the micrometre range. The typical external diameters of the constituent particles (aggregates) are greater than 100 nm. E 551 does not break down under acidic conditions such as in the stomach, but may release dissolved silica in environments with higher pH such as the intestinal tract. E 551 is one of the toxicologically most intensively studied substances and has not shown any relevant systemic or local toxicity after oral exposure. Synthetic amorphous silica (SAS) meeting the specifications for use as a food additive (E 551) is and has always been produced by the same two production methods: the thermal and the wet processes, resulting in E 551 products consisting of particles typically in the micrometre size range. The constituent particles (aggregates) are typically larger than 100 nm and do not contain discernible primary particles. Particle sizes above 100 nm are necessary for E 551 to fulfil its technical function as spacer between food particles, thus avoiding the caking of food particles. Based on an in-depth review of the available toxicological information and intake data, it is concluded that the SAS products specified for use as food additive E 551 do not cause adverse effects in oral repeated-dose studies including doses that exceed current OECD guideline recommendations. In particular, there is no evidence for liver toxicity after oral intake. No adverse effects have been found in oral fertility and developmental toxicity studies, nor are there any indications from in vivo studies for an immunotoxic or neurotoxic effect. SAS is neither mutagenic nor genotoxic in vivo. In intact cells, a direct interaction of unlabelled and unmodified SAS with DNA was never found. Differences in the magnitude of biological responses between pyrogenic and precipitated silica described in some in vitro studies with murine macrophages at exaggerated exposure levels seem to be related to interactions with cell culture proteins and cell membranes. The in vivo studies do not indicate that there is a toxicologically relevant difference between SAS products after oral exposure. It is noted that any silicon dioxide product not meeting established specifications, and/or produced to provide new functionality in food, requires its own specific safety and risk assessment.Entities:
Keywords: E 551; Food safety; Nanostructured; SAS; Silicon dioxide; Synthetic amorphous silica
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27699444 PMCID: PMC5104814 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-016-1850-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Overview on synthetic amorphous silica products used as a food additive (E 551)
| Product | EU name (Reg. 231/2012) | EINECS no | CAS no., generic | CAS no., specific | Chemical abstracts index name | JRCa name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pyrogenic silica | Fumed silica | 231-545-4 | 7631-86-9 | 112945-52-5 | Silica, amorphous, fumed; crystalline-free | NM-202 NM-203 |
| Hydrated silica | Precipitated silica | 231-545-4 | 7631-86-9 | 112926-00-8 | Synthetic amorphous silica, precipitated; crystalline-free | NM-200 NM-201 NM-204 |
| Silica gel, hydrous silica | 231-545-4 | 7631-86-9 | 112926-00-8 | Synthetic amorphous silica, gel; crystalline-free |
a JRC EU Joint Research Centre
Fig. 1SEM images of pyrogenic silica granule, agglomerate, and aggregate (©Evonik Resource Efficiency GmbH)
Fig. 2TEM images of part of a pyrogenic silica aggregate (left) and enlarged view of inner structures at the nanometre scale (middle, right) (©Evonik Resource Efficiency GmbH)
Silicon and Silicon dioxide (silica particle) intakes from different sources
| Source | Daily intake | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silicon (Si) | mg/day | mg/kg bw/day | ||
| Food (naturally and from additives), Western population | 20–50 | 0.3–0.8 | EFSA ( | |
| Food (mainly plant based) | 140–204 | Cited in Jugdaohsingh ( | ||
| Food (BE) | 18.6 ± 8.5 | Robberecht et al. ( | ||
| Beer (1 litre) | 6.4–56.5 | Casey and Bamforth ( | ||
| Dietary supplements | 1–75, up to 700 | 0.017–1.5, up to 12 | EFSA ( | |
| Silica (SiO2) | ||||
| E 551 in food (NL) | 658 | 9.4 (“dissolved”) | Dekkers et al. ( | |
| E 551 in food | 0.28–4.53 | (FCRA | ||
| Dietary supplements | up to 1500 | up to 25 | EFSA ( | |
| Mixed silicate particles in food | 35 (0–254) | Lomer et al. ( | ||
| Toothpaste containing 30 % SAS | 41 | 0.65 | Using intake data from (SCCS | |
| E 551 in medicines | 0.2 | Based on two oral tablets/day à 0.5 g with 0.02 % E 551 | ||
aParticle size range 1–200 nm
b(SCCS 2015): daily intake, toothpaste = 138 mg or 2.16 mg/kg bw
Genotoxicity of silica in vitro (including data of non-food-grade and colloidal SAS)
| Test system | Test substance | Particle size and/or SSA | Source | Method/treatment/parameters studied | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In gene mutation—bacteria | ||||||
| | Pyrogenic SAS (CAB-O-SIL® EH-5) | 385 m2/g | Cabot | Standard plate, agar plate, only with S-9 | Negative | ECETOC ( |
| | Pyrogenic SAS (CAB-O-SIL® M-5) | 200 m2/g | Cabot | nr, ± S-9 (not defined) | Negative | |
| | Silica gel (Silcron G-910) | nr | nr | Standard plate, agar plate | Negative | |
| | Silica gel (Silcron G-910) | nr | nr | Standard plate, agar plate | Negative | |
| | Silica gel (Syloid 244) | 2.5–3.7 µm | nr | Spot test | Negative | |
| | Colloidal silica* | 20, 100 nm | E&B Nanotech Co Ltd | OECD TG 471, GLP | Negative | Kwon et al. ( |
| Gene mutation—mammalian cells | ||||||
| CHO cells | Pyrogenic SAS (CAB-O-SIL® EH-5) | 385 m2/g | Cabot | OECD TG 476, GLP | Negative | ECETOC ( |
| L5178Y mouse lymphoma cells | Precipitated SAS (NM-200) | 190 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 476, GLP | Negative | CEFIC ( |
| L5178Y mouse lymphoma cells | Pyrogenic and precipitated SAS (NM-200, -201, -202, -203) | 10–22 nm | JRC | OECD TG 476 | Negative | NANOGENOTOX ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts, HPRT | 2 pyrogenic SAS, 1 precipitated SAS, 2 precipitated colloids* | 20 and 25/70 nm (pyrogenic), 20 nm (precip.), 15, 40/80 nm (colloid)/50–200 m2/g | Commercial | 12.5, 25, 50, 100 mg/L, 24 h | Negative | Guichard et al. ( |
| Mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF-LacZ cells) | Stöber silica without stabiliser* | 10, 30, 80, 400 nm (actual sizes 11, 34, 34 and 248 nm); SSA nr | Glantreo | 4, 40, 400 mg/L, 16 h | 10, 80, 400 nm: negative | Park et al. ( |
| Mouse lung epithelial (FE1) cells derived from Muta™ Mouse | Colloidal SAS* and 2 µm SAS | 12, 5–15, 10–20 nm, 2 µm | Sigma-Aldrich, NIST | 12.5 mg/L for 8 consecutive times | Negative, concentrations higher than 12.5 mg/L were cytotoxic and not included in the analysis | Decan et al. ( |
| In vitro micronuclei induction | ||||||
| BEAS2B, 16HBE, A549, Caco-2 | Pyrogenic and precipitated SAS (NM-200, -201, -202, -203) | 10–22 nm | JRC | OECD TG 487, 24 h, then cytB added | A549: positive for NM-201 and NM-202; | NANOGENOTOX ( |
| BEAS2B | Precipitated silica (NM-200) and pyrogenic silica (NM-203) | 22 nm, 190 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 487, 0.1–100 mg/L, 48 h, cytB added 6 h after the beginning of treatment | Negative | Zijno et al. ( |
| Caco-2 | Colloidal silica (Levasil® 50, Levasil® 200)* | 15, 55 nm | HC Starck | OECD TG 487, 24 h treatment, then cytB added | 15 nm: 1.5-fold↑ at 16 µg/mL and threefold↑ at 32 and 64 µg/mL in the presence of ↓RI (remained above 55 %); addition of FCS reduced effect by 50 % | Tarantini et al. ( |
| Human lymphocytes | Pyrogenic and precipitated SAS (NM-200, -201, -202, -203) | 10–22 nm, 160–230 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 487, up to 1,250 mg/L, 24 h | Negative | Tavares et al. ( |
| Human lymphocytes | Colloidal silica (Levasil® 50, Levasil® 200)* | 15, 55 nm/200, 50 m2/g | HC Starck | OECD TG 487, 31.6–1000 mg/L | Negative | Downs et al. ( |
| Balb/3T3 mouse fibroblasts | Precipitated silica (NM-200) and pyrogenic silica (NM-203); and | 5–90 nm/50–200 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 487, 100 mg/L, 24 h, then cytB added | Negative | Uboldi et al. ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts | 2 pyrogenic, 1 precipitated, and 2 precipitated colloids* | 20 and 25/70 nm (pyrogenic), 20 nm (precip.), 15, 40/80 nm (colloid)/50–200 m2/g | Commercial | 12.5, 25, 50, 100 mg/L, 24 h | Negative | Guichard et al. ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts | Silica gel (Spherisorb® 5 µm)* | nr | nr | 24 h, 20–160 µg/cm2 | Weak but significant induction of micronuclei at cytotoxic doses | Liu et al. ( |
| Mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF-LacZ cells) | Stöber silica without stabiliser* | 10, 30, 80, 400 nm (actual sizes 11, 34, 34 and 248 nm); SSA nr | Glantreo | 4, 40, 400 mg/L, 16 h | 10, 30, 400 nm: negative | Park et al. ( |
| A549 human epithelial lung carcinoma cells | Stöber silica* | 12–174 nm | Laboratory | OECD TG 487; 40 h | No significant induction of micronuclei; other weak chromosomal effects were observed, but again without reaching statistical significance; no cytotoxicity | Gonzalez et al. ( |
| In vitro chromosome aberration studies | ||||||
| Chromosome aberrations, CHO cells | Pyrogenic SAS (CAB-O-SIL® EH-5) | 385 m2/g | Cabot | Equivalent to OECD TG 473, GLP | Negative | Cabot 1990 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| Chromosome aberrations, | Precipitated silica (NM-200) | 190 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 473, GLP | Negative | CEFIC ( |
| Chromosome aberrations, | Colloidal silica* | 20, 100 nm | E&B Nanotech Co Ltd | OECD TG 473, GLP | Negative | Kwon et al. ( |
| Chromosome aberrations, human embryonic lung cells (Wi-38) | Micronized silica gel (Syloid® 244) | 2.5–3.7 µm | nr | 24 h (presumably), only in the absence of S9, 1–1000 µg/mL | Negative | US-FDA 1974 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| In vitro UDS assays | ||||||
| Primary rat hepatocytes | Pyrogenic SAS (CAB-O-SIL® EH-5) | 385 m2/g | Cabot | 0.3–1000 µg/ml, with and without S9, exposure time 18–20 h | Negative | Cabot 1989 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| In vitro comet assays | ||||||
| HT-29 human colon carcinoma cell line | Pyrogenic SAS (AEROSIL® 200, AEROSIL® Ox50) | 12, 40 nm, 200, 50 m2/g | Evonik Industries | Cytotoxicity (±FCS, 1 and 10 %, 0.03–156.3 µg/cm2); comet assay with and without Fpg | Negative, no oxidative DNA damage | Gehrke et al. ( |
| Human Caco-2 intestinal cells (undifferentiated) | Pyrogenic silica* | 14 nm, SSA 200 m2/g | Sigma | 20, 80 µg/cm2; 4 and 24 h, cytotoxicity (LDH and WST-1); 20 µg/cm2 for Fpg–comet assay (4 h treatment); glutathione | Positive (20 µg/cm2) in the presence of cytotoxicity (cytotoxic at 20 µg/cm2 after 24 (LDH) or 4 h (WST-1); DNA damage only with Fpg; ↓glutathione | Gerloff ( |
| A549, HT29, and HaCat | Colloidal silica (Ludox SM-30)* | 14 nm, agglomerated to 500 nm in medium | Sigma | 24 h, 0.01–10 µg/mL | Significant increases in DNA damage at ≥0.1 mg/L in all tested cell types; cytotoxicity ≥1 mg/L | Mu et al. ( |
| 3T3-L1 fibroblasts | Colloidal silica (LUDOX® CL and CL-X and non-stabilised SAS particles)* | 20, 30, 80, 400 nm | Commercial and laboratory | 4 and 40 μg/mL in DMEM; 3, 6, and 24 h incubation | Negative | Barnes et al. ( |
| SH-SY5Y neuronal cell line | Colloidal silica (LUDOX® AS-20, CL and AM, polygon)* | 12 nm (nominal) | Commercial | 48 h, up to 1000 ppm | Inconclusive | Kim et al. ( |
| Primary rat alveolar macrophages | Precipitated silica (NM-200) | 230 m2/g | JRC | 4 and 24 h incubation; 0, 0.01, 0.05, 0.25, 2.5, and 10 (10 only for 4 h incubations) µg/cm2; positive control D12 (25 µg/cm2; 4 h) | Negative, no oxidative DNA lesions; cytotoxic at highest dose level tested | CEFIC ( |
| A549 | Colloidal silica (Levasil®)* | 9, 15, 30, 55 nm | AkzoNobel | Alkaline unwinding, 100–300 µg/mL | 30, 55 nm: >50 µg/mL DNA damage; 9, 15 nm: at higher concentrations, at 100 µg/mL oxidative damage | Maser et al. ( |
| Rat, lung | Colloidal silica (Levasil®)* | 15, 55 nm | AkzoNobel | Precision cut slices, 10–300 µg/mL | 15, 55 nm: >100 µg/mL DNA damage; no overt cytotoxicity | Maser et al. ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts | Colloidal silica (Levasil®)* | 15, 55 nm | AkzoNobel | Alkaline comet assay, alkaline unwinding assay, | 15 nm: ↑strand breaks at 100 µg/mL (>twofold); no oxidative damage; no cytotoxicity | Maser et al. ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts | Silica gel (Spherisorb®)* | 5 µm | Commercial | 3 h treatment | Positive at ≥68.9 µg/cm2 | Zhong et al. ( |
| V79 hamster lung fibroblasts | 2 pyrogenic, 1 precipitated, and 2 precipitated colloids* | 20 and 25/70 nm (pyrogenic), 20 nm (precip.), 15, 40/80 nm (colloid)/50–200 m2/g | Commercial | 12.5, 25, 50, 100 mg/L, 24 h, comet assay with and without Fpg | Positive only with Pyr20 and Col15 in the presence of cytotoxicity and with Fpg, but no change in ROS; indicating indirect mechanisms | Guichard et al. ( |
| Phosphorylated gamma-H2Ax foci | ||||||
| Caco-2 cell line | Colloidal silica (Levasil® 50, Levasil® 200)* | 15, 55 nm | HC Starck | Phosphorylated gamma-H2Ax foci, 24 h, 4–64 µg/mL/1.25–20 µg/cm2 | 15 nm: threefold↑ at 32 µg/mL and fivefold↑ at 64 µg/mL; likely a result of apoptosis as the caspase was also↑ | Tarantini et al. ( |
| Human HT-29 intestinal epithelial cell line | Mesoporous silica, core dye doped with two different labels* | 25, 100 nm | Laboratory | Phosphorylated gamma-H2Ax foci, 24 h, 10, 50, 150 µg/mL | 25 nm: 10, 50 (↑), 150 ↑ | Sergent et al. ( |
cytB Cytochalasin B, HPRT hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, NIST National Institute of Standards and Technology (USA), ROS reactive oxygen species
* Substance which does not fulfil the current EU criteria for E 551 (no star does, however, not implicate that the substance would be in compliance with EU E 551 specifications)
Genotoxicity of silica in vivo (including data of non-food-grade and colloidal SAS)
| Species, exposure route, dose levels | Test substance | particle size and/or SSA | Source | Method | Result | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ex vivo gene mutation tests | ||||||
| F-344 rat, inhalation, 50 mg/m3, 13 weeks | Pyrogenica silica (AEROSIL® 200) | 200 m2/g | Degussa | HPRT mutations in alveolar type II cells | Negative, highly cytotoxic | Johnston et al. ( |
| In vivo micronucleus tests | ||||||
| Sprague–Dawley rat, m (up to 5/group); gavage, 5, 10, 20 mg/kg bw/day on 3 consecutive days | Pyrogenic silica (NM-202, -203) | 10–22 nm | JRC | OECD TG 474 (1997) (combined with comet assay), bone marrow | Negative | Nanogenotox ( |
| Colon micronucleus assay (combined with comet assay) | Negative (NM-200, -201), | |||||
| I CR mouse, gavage, 500, 1000, 2000 mg/kg bw, in 10 mL distilled water/kg | Colloidal silica* | 20, 100 nm | E&B Nanotech Co Ltd | OECD TG 474 (1997), GLP; bone marrow | Negative | Kwon et al. ( |
| Sprague–Dawley rat, m (up to 5/group); 3, 6, 12 mg/kg bw/day by intratracheal instillation and 5, 10, 20 mg/kg bw/day by iv injection (iv only NM-203); on 3 consecutive days | Pyrogenic and precipitated silica (NM-200, -201, -202, -203) | 10–22 nm | JRC | OECD TG 474 (1997) (combined with comet assay), bone marrow | Negative (intratracheal instillation) | Nanogenotox ( |
| Wistar rat, m, f, inhalation 1, 5, 25 mg/m3, 14 day + 14 day recovery | Precipitated silica (NM-200) | 190 m2/g | JRC | OECD TG 474, polychromatic bone marrow erythrocytes, GLP | Negative | Knebel et al. ( |
| CR rat, m (5/group), inhalation (nose only), 7x10e7 and 1.8x10e8 particles/cm3 (1.8 and 86 mg/m3) for 1 or 3 day | Pyrogenic silica, | 37, 83 nm | Laboratory | Micronucleus assay in peripheral blood cells by flow cytometry; lung pathology and inflammatory parameters | Negative, no adverse effects on lung, no inflammation | Sayes et al. ( |
| Wistar rat, m (4–8/group), iv, 25, 50, 125 (55 nm only) mg/kg bw/day for 3 days | Colloidal silica (Levasil® 200, Levasil® 50)* | 15, 55 nm; 200, 50 m2/g | HC Starck | Combined micronucleus/comet assay; micronuclei in peripheral blood; test substance diluted and neutralised before injection into tail vein | Small increase in micronucleated reticulocytes at MTD, but not at lower doses | Downs et al. ( |
| In vivo chromosome aberration | ||||||
| Sprague–Dawley rat, m (1 and 5 × 1.4–5000 mg/kg bw, oral) | Silica gel | 2.5–3.7 µm | nr | Chromosome aberration in bone marrow cells; animals killed 6, 24, or 48 h after single administration or 6 h after last administration in the repeated-dose experiment | Negative | US-FDA 1974 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| In vivo comet assays | ||||||
| Sprague–Dawley rat, m (up to 5/group); 5, 10, 20 mg/kg bw/day by gavage and iv (iv only for NM-203); up to 12 mg/kg bw/day by instillation; on 3 consecutive days | Pyrogenic and precipitated silica (NM-200, -201, -202, -203) | 10–22 nm | JRC | Combined comet/micronucleus assay; liver, kidney, blood, bone marrow; for the oral route in addition: duodenum and colon; | Negative (in all organs and tissues), no overt toxicity except for iv route (LD50) | Nanogenotox ( |
| Sprague–Dawley rat, gavage, 500, 1000, 2000 mg/kg bw, at 0, 24 and 45 h before killing | Colloidal silica* | 20, 100 nm | E&B Nanotech Co Ltd | OECD TG 489, GLP; liver, stomach | Negative | Kwon et al. ( |
| Wistar rat, m,f, inhalation 1, 5, 25 mg/m3, 14 day + 14 day recovery | Precipitated silica (NM-200) | 190 m2/g | JRC | Ex vivo comet assay (± hGOOG1) in alveolar macrophages from BAL; immunohistochemistry in lung epithelial cells | Macrophages: small, concentration-dependent increase in DNA damage, particularly after the recovery period; no oxidative damage; particle aggregates/agglomerates in cytoplasm of intraalveolar macrophages; in lung epithelial cells slight, but significant increase in 8-OH-dG positive nuclei at d1 and d14 post-exposure | Knebel et al. ( |
| Wistar rat, m (4–8/group), iv, 25, 50, 125 (55 nm only) mg/kg bw/day for 3 days | Colloidal silica* (Levasil® 200, Levasil® 50) | 15, 55 nm; 200, 50 m2/g | HC Starck | Combined comet/micronucleus assay; test substance diluted and neutralised before injection into tail vein; organs examined: liver, lung, white blood cells | 15 nm: small increase in DNA damage at 50 mg/kg bw | Downs et al. ( |
| Rat, single intratracheal instillation, 360 µg | Colloidal silica* (Levasil®) | 15, 55 nm; | Akzo Nobel | Lung, bone marrow, 3 day after instillation | Negative, pulmonary inflammation (more pronounced with 15 nm) | Maser et al. ( |
| Drosophila tests | ||||||
| Drosophila melanogaster | Colloidal silica* (Levasil®) | 6, 15, 30, 55 nm and micron-sized, 50–450 m2/g | HC Starck | Wing-spot and comet assay (± FPG) in larvae haemocytes: larvae were fed 0.1–10 mM | Negative (no significant increases in the frequencies of somatic and recombination mutants); | Demir et al. ( |
BAL bronchoalveolar lavage, FPG formamido pyrimidine glycosylase, HPRT hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase-encoding gene mutation, iv intravenous, m male, MTD maximum tolerated dose, nr not reported)
* Substance which does not fulfil the current EU criteria for E 551 (no star does, however, not implicate that the substance would be in compliance with EU E 551 specifications)
aIn publication erroneously described as “precipitated silica”
Repeated-dose oral toxicity studies in rodents with food-grade SAS (including colloidal silica)
| Substance, SSAa | No. and sex/group | Exposure | Dose levels | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Rat | |||||
| NM-203 | 5 m, 5f | 90 day, gavage | 0, 2, 5, 10, 20, or 50 mg/kg bw/day; silicic acid (50 mg/kg bw/day) as comparator | Preliminary data: alterations in blood count, PHA-induced lymphocyte proliferation (spleen, MLN), and LPS-induced NO and cytokine production (peritoneal resident macrophages). Clinical biochemistry: no alterations in liver biomarkers, but alterations in creatinine in males at ≥10 mg/kg and in females at ≥2 mg/kg | NANoREG ( |
| Food-grade silica, 380 m2/g | 5 m | 28 day (high dose also 84 day), diet | 100, 1000, 2500 mg/kg bw/day | 28 day: no effects except small but significant increase in villus heights and crypt depths, but no significant differences in the ratio between the villus height and crypt depth; 84 day: no significant effects; ↑Si in spleen | van der Zande et al. ( |
| NM-202, 200 m2/g | 5 m | 28 day (high dose also 84 day), diet | 100, 500, 1000 mg/kg bw/day | 28 day: no effects except small but significant increase in villus heights and crypt depths, but no significant differences in the ratio between the villus height and crypt depth; 84 day: ↑periportal fibrosis in the liver; induced gene expression in a fibrosis-related gene set | van der Zande et al. ( |
| Pyrogenic silica, SSA nr | Rat | 90 day, gavage and diet | Up to 100 mg/kg bw/day | No toxic effects | Shumakova et al. ( |
| HDK® V15, 130–170 m2/g | 20 rats | 5 day/week for 4 weeks (gavage) | 0 (vehicle control); 500 mg/kg bw in water | No effects on appearance, behaviour, food consumption, and body weight | Klosterkoetter ( |
| CAB-O-SIL® Fluffy (very similar to CAB-O-SIL® M5), 200 m2/g | 15 m, 15f | 90 day (in diet) | 0, 1, 3, 5 % in diet (ca. 0, 1000, 3000, 5000 mg/kg bw/day); 3 % cosmetic talc as positive control | No signs of systemic toxicity, no effect on growth rate, food consumption, or survival; no gross or microscopic pathological changes | Cabot 1958 as cited in ECETOC ( |
|
| |||||
| Rat | |||||
| NM-200, 230 m2/g | 5 m | 28 day + 14 day recovery (gavage) | 0, 100, 300, 1000 mg/kg bw/day | NOEL 1000 mg/kg bw/day, GLP | CEFIC ( |
| Levasil® 200, 40 % dispersion* | 5 m, 5f | 28 day | 0, 1000 mg/kg bw/day | NOEL 1000 mg/kg bw/day | Buesen et al. ( |
| Colloidal silica (20 and 100 nm)* | 10–15/sex | 90 day (gavage) | 0, 500, 1000, 2000 mg/kg bw/day | NOEL 2000 mg/kg bw/day, GLP | Kim et al. ( |
| Sipernat®22, 190 m2/g | 10 m, 10f | 90 day (in diet) | 0, 0.5. 2, 8 % in diet (ca. 0, 250, 1000, 4000 mg/kg bw/day) | No effects at 250 and 1000; at 4000: increased food intake with decreased food efficiency, abs, and rel. caecum weights↑ (not a toxic effect); no gross or histopathological changes | Degussa 1981, as cited in ECETOC ( |
| Syloid® 244 | 5 m, 5f | 14 day (in diet) | 0, 5–20 % in diet (5 % day 1–10, 20 % day 11–14) | No clinical signs, no effects on food or water consumption, bw gain, behaviour | Grace, 1974 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| Syloid® 244 | 5 m, 5f | 6 m (in diet) | 0, 3.2, 10 % in diet (m: 2170, 7950 mg/kg bw/day; f: 2420, 8980 mg/kg bw/day) | No clinical signs, no effects on food or water consumption, bw gain, behaviour, survival, haematology, clinical chemistry; no gross pathological or microscopic findings | Grace 1975 as cited in ECETOC ( |
| Syloid® 244 | 20 m, 20f | 103 wk (in diet) | 0, 1.25, 2.5, 5 % in diet; the top dose corresponds to 2500 mg/kg bw/day | No effects on bw, food consumption, clinical signs, clinical chemistry; no gross or microscopic findings. Liver weights↓ (f) in mid- and high-dose groups. The OECD derived from this study a NOAEL for chronic oral administration at approximately 2500 mg/kg bw/day | Takizawa et al. ( |
| Mouse | |||||
| Syloid® 244 | 20 m, 20f(B6C3F1) | Up to 21 months (in diet) | 0, 1.25, 2.5, 5 % in diet; the top dose corresponds to 7500 mg/kg bw/day | 7000 mg/kg bw/day: ↓growth, no other effects; no gross or microscopic findings; occurrence of tumours not different from controls | EFSA ( |
* Substance which does not fulfil the current EU criteria for E 551 (no star does, however, not necessarily implicate that the substance would be in compliance with EU E 551 specifications)
aSSA specific surface area
In vitro studies assessing cytotoxicity, ROS production, and inflammatory effects of silica (including data of non-food-grade and colloidal SAS but excluding pulmonary system)
| Cell system | Test substance | Particle size/SSA | Source | Treatment/parameters studied | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | ||||||
| Human hepatic L-02 cell line | Colloidal SiO2* | 21. 48 and 86 nm/225, 106, 39 m2/g | Center of Analysis and Test Research (East China, Shanghai) | 200–1000 mg/L for 12, 24, 36, and 48 h; cytotoxicity (LDH release, MTT), ROS, and ultrastructure (TEM); glutathione, lipid peroxidation, apoptosis | ≥400 mg/L: 21-nm particles were cytotoxic and induced oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, GSH depletion, apoptosis, and upregulated levels of p53 and Bax-Bcl-2 ratio | Ye et al. ( |
| Human HepG2 hepatoma cell line and L-02 cells | SAS (not specified in publication) | 7, 20, 50 nm/380, 150, 65 m2/g | Shanghai Cabot Chemical Co Ltd | 20, 40, 80, 160, 320, 640 mg/L;48 h; MTT, apoptosis, oxidative stress, p53, caspase-3, Bcl-2, procaspase-9, Bax | ↓Viability at ≥80 mg/L in HepG2 and ≥320 mg/L in L-02 (7,20 nm); 50 nm: not cytotoxic; apoptosis and oxidative stress in HepG2 at ≥160 mg/L; possibly activation of mitochondrial-dependent pathway by oxidative stress; no effects in L-02 cells | Lu et al. ( |
| Human HepG2 hepatoma | SAS, purity 99.5 % | 15 nm/ | Nanostructured | 1–200 mg/L, 72 h; MTT, NRU, ROS production, lipid peroxidation, GSH depletion; PCR, immunoblotting | ↓Viability at ≥25 mg/L, oxidative stress and apoptosis; mRNA and protein expressions of cell cycle checkpoint gene p53 and apoptotic genes (bax and caspase-3) were upregulated while the anti-apoptotic gene bcl-2 was down-regulated; attenuated by vitamin C addition | Ahmad et al. ( |
| Human HepG2 hepatoma | Stöber silica* | 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 150, 200 nm | Laboratory | 10–500 mg/L. 24, 72 h, viability, MTT, LDH | No size dependent changes in viability, except for highest dose of 60-nm particles, ↑LDH leakage at 500 mg/L, viability after 72 h not significantly reduced in comparison with 24 h of exposure | Kim et al. ( |
| Human HuH-7 cells | Not specified (“nanosilica”)* | 10–20, 40–50, 90–110 nm, and 45 μm/SSA nr | Gift from Prof. Hee Kwon Chae | 5 concentrations, (0.24 µg/L to 2.4 mg/L), 72 h; MTT, DNA content, GSH, oxidative stress | Smallest particles: 15 % increase in glutathione production; otherwise no size dependency; no other effects | Cha and Myung ( |
| Kupffer cells (KC); Buffalo rat liver cells (BRL) + supernatant from SiO2-treated KC | Colloidal silica* | 15 nm, aggregated to 92 nm in culture medium (RPMI 1640)/SSA nr | Sigma | 50–800 mg/L, 24 h, TNF-α and H2O2 in supernatant; LDH, AST in BRL cells | ≥200 mg/L: KCs released NO; at ≥400 mg/L: ↑ROS, ↑TNF-α | Chen et al. ( |
| Gastrointestinal tract | ||||||
| Human TR146 buccal epithelial cells | Not specified (“nanosilica”)* | 14 nm/SSA nr | Sigma | 0–1250 µM apoptosis, cell cycle, ROS production, inflammatory response | No effects on apoptosis and cell cycle; ≥500 µM: oxidative stress, ↑IL-6, ↑TNF-α | Tay et al. ( |
| Human MKN-1 stomach cells | Not specified (“nanosilica”)* | 10–20, 40–50, 90–110 nm, and 45 μm, not specified/SSA nr | Gift from Prof. Hee Kwon Chae | 5 concentrations, (0.24 µg/L to 2.4 mg/L); 72 h MTT, DNA content, GSH, oxidative stress | No effects | Cha and Myung ( |
| DLD-1, SW480 and NCM460 cells (G2/M synchronised) | Not specified (“nanosilica”)* | 14 nm/SSA nr | Sigma | 0, 62.5, 250, 1000 µM for 24 h, morphology, cell cycle, ROS production | Minimal biological responses from the intestinal cells | Setyawati et al. ( |
| Human gastric adenocarcinoma (MKN-28), human colon carcinoma (HT-29) | Precipitated from sodium silicate or TEOS* | 21, 80 nm; hydrodynamic size 188.3 and 236.3/SSA nr | Laboratory | Up to 667 mg/L. 48 h, MTT, LDH | Slightly cytotoxic at high concentrations, IC20 in HT-29: 508–510 mg/L; MKN-28: 443–572 mg/L) | Chang et al. ( |
| Human Caco-2 intestinal cells | Pyrogenic SAS* | 14 nm/SSA 200 m2/g | Sigma | 5 µg/cm2; 4 and 24 h treatment; WST-1 assay with native and digestion simulated particle suspensions; both in undifferentiated and in differentiated cells | No effect of particle pre-treatment on cytotoxicity (WST-1 assay) or IL-8 expression; ↓viability only in undifferentiated cells after 24 h (IC50 9 and 10 µg/cm2 for pristine and pre-treated silica); | Gerloff et al. ( |
| Human Caco-2 intestinal cells | Pyrogenic silica (AEROSIL 300, 380), precipitated silica (Tixosil 43, 73) | 300, 380 m2/g (pyrogenic), 8–10 µm (precipitated) | Evonik, Rhodia | 100 mg/L, MTS, LDH | Only slightly cytotoxic (undifferentiated cells), independent of dispersion method (ultrasonication, mechanical stirring) | Contado et al. ( |
| Human Caco-2 intestinal cell line | Colloidal silica* (Levasil®) | 15, 55 nm/ | HC Starck | 4–256 µg/mL/1.25–80 µg/cm2; Cytotoxicity (XTT assay), caspase activity, intracellular ROS (DCFH-DA fluorescence); IL-8 | 55 nm:↓viability (30 %) at 256 µg/mL; no effect on ROS | Tarantini et al. ( |
| Human Caco-2BBe1 cell line | SAS* | 12 nm, 175–225 m2/g pristine or treated with digestive enzymes; purity 99.8 % | Sigma | 10 µg/cm2, 24 h either single or repeated weekly; necrosis, apoptosis, membrane damage, and mitochondrial activity; | 10 µg/cm2: no decrease in viability or mitochondrial activity; no significant toxicities after long-term treatment | McCracken ( |
| Human Caco-2BBe1 cell line | 6 samples of pyrogenic SAS | 9–26 nm/SSA nr | Commercial vendors in China and USA | 0.01, 0.1, 1 mg/L medium, 24 h; ROS | “Brush border disruption”: up to 43 % loss of microvilli at 1 mg/L | Yang et al. ( |
| Human gastric epithelial cell (GES-1), colorectal adenocarcinoma cells (Caco-2) | 2 pyrogenic SAS (AEROSIL®), two precipitated SAS | 151–357m2/g | Vendors in China | Up to 600 mg/L, 4–72 h, cytotoxicity (WST, LDH) cellular uptake, ROS, cell cycle, apoptosis, | 100 mg/L: no effects, ≥200 mg/L cell cycle arrest and reduced cell growth, but no apoptosis or necrosis; no passage through Caco-2 cell layer (after 4 h) | Yang et al. ( |
| Cardiovascular system | ||||||
| Red blood cells | Pyrogenic silica | 200 m2/g | Cabot | 30 min at RT with 40–2000 mg/L in Dulbecco’s phosphate-buffered saline | Silanol groups might be involved in the lysis process | Pandurangi et al. ( |
| Human red blood cells | Precipitated SAS (Zeofree 80, purity 98 %) | 1–3 µm/ | Commercial | Haemolysis of human RBCs (tested at 0.1–26.5 µg/cm2), neg control PBS, pos control 1 % Triton-X 100 | Haemolysis at ≥0.1 µg/cm2 | Sayes et al. ( |
| Human red blood cells | Stöber silica*, mesoporous silica* | 115 nm (Stöber), 120 nm (mesoporous) | Laboratory | 0–500 mg/L, 24 h | Nonporous Stöber silica showed highest cellular association; cellular association was directly linked to plasma membrane damage | Yu et al. ( |
| Rabbit red blood cells | Pyrogenic silica*, mesoporous silica* | 16 nm (pyrogenic silica)/mesoporous silica: 1138 m2/g | Sigma-Aldrich | 20, 40, 60 and 100 mg/L | Haemolysis related to the number of | Slowing et al. ( |
| Mouse red blood cells | Pyrogenic silica (AEROSIL); Stöber silica* | 16 nm (pyrogenic silica), nr for Stöber silica | Sigma; laboratory | 25, 50, 100 mg/L, 2 h | Pyrogenic, but not Stöber silica caused haemolysis | Zhang et al. ( |
| Endothelial cell line EAHY926 | Colloidal silica* | 14, 15, 16, 19, and 60 nm monodisperse, spherical particles; 104, 335 nm | Laboratory | LDH, MTT | ↓Cell viability, EC50: 33–47 µg/cm2 for 14,15, and 16 nm, 89 and 254 µg/cm2 for 19 and 60 nm; >1 mg/cm2 for 104 and 335 nm; | Napierska et al. ( |
| Myocardial H9c2(2–1) cells | Colloidal silica* | 21 and 48 nm/225 and 106 m2/g | Center of Analysis and Test Research (East China. Shanghai) | 100–1600 mg/L for 12, 24, 36, and 48 h; cytotoxicity (LDH release, MTT), ROS, glutathione, lipid peroxidation, apoptosis | ↑Oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation, GSH depletion, apoptosis, and upregulated levels of p53 and Bax-Bcl-2 ratio | Ye et al. ( |
| Primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) | Stöber silica* | 62 nm; Ru-labelled for cellular uptake studies | Laboratory | 0, 25, 50, 75, 100 mg/L for 6, 12 and/or 24 h; LDH, MTT, ROS, apoptosis, Comet, cellular uptake, cell cycle arrest, mitochondrial membrane potential | ≥25 mg/L: ↑LDH, necrosis, ↑ROS, cell cycle arrest; changes in mitochondrial membrane potential | Duan et al. ( |
| Macrophages | ||||||
| Mouse peritoneal macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 | SAS* | 14 nm (SSA 77.7 m2/g); “mild” aggregation (not specified further) | Sigma | 0.0052, 0.052, 0.52, 5.2, 52, and 520 µg/cm2). 24 h/cytotoxicity (MTT, LDH), apoptosis; serum-free medium | ≥5.2 µg/cm2 cytotoxicity; 2x52 µg/cm2 for 24 h: apoptosis (DNA fragmentation); annexin V binding after 6 h | Kim et al. ( |
| RAW 264.7 | SAS, purity 99.8 %* | 12 nm/SSA nr | Commercial | 5–40 ppm | ROS↑ intracellular GSH↓ | Park and Park ( |
| RAW 264.7 | Stöber silica*, mesoporous silica* | 115 nm (Stöber), 120 nm (mesoporous) | Laboratory | 100, 250, 500 mg/L, 24 h, WST-8 | Cytotoxic at lowest dose tested (100 mg/L) | Yu et al. ( |
| RAW 264.7 | NM-200, NM-203 | 14 nm (NM-200), 13 nm (NM-203)/189.2 m2/g and 203.9 m2/g | JRC | 1–100 mg/L, 24, 48, 72 h viability (LDH) | NM-200: IC50 (72 h) >100 mg/L; | Farcal et al. ( |
| RAW 264.7 | NM-200, NM-203 | 189, 203 m2/g | JRC | 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 µg/cm2;24,48, 72 h | ≥5 µg/m2: ↑inflammatory cytokines (at 10 µg/m2: NM-200 less than NM-203); more efficient cellular uptake of pyrogenic silica | Di Cristo et al. ( |
| Peripheral human blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) | Colloidal silica suspensions* | 10, 100 nm | Polysciences, Inc. | 50 (500 for 100 nm)-4000 mg/L, 24, 48 h | ↓Viability at ≥50 mg/L (10 nm) or 500 mg/L (100 nm), GSH depletion and cytokine changes at ≥250 mg/L (10 nm) or 500–2000 mg/L (100 nm) | Mendoza et al. ( |
| Human acute monocytic leukaemia cells (THP-1) | Pyrogenic silica (AEROSIL); Stöber silica* | 16 nm (pyrogenic silica), nr for Stöber silica | Sigma; laboratory | 0.4–200 mg/L, 24 h, IL-1beta | ≥50 mg/L: ↑IL-1β, activation of Nalp3 inflammasome by pyrogenic silica, but not by Stöber silica; activation was via a non-lysosomal process; few pyrogenic particles were taken up into the cells but collected on the surface membrane; in contrast, most Stöber silica particles were internalised | Zhang et al. ( |
| BALB/C mouse monocyte macrophage J774 cell line | Ludox SM sol* | 2–335 nm | Commercial | Cytotoxicity (WST-1), 24 h; aggregation | IC50 6–9 mg/L toxicity is dependent of surface area, but not state of aggregation (does not change surface area) | Rabolli et al. |
| MH-S mouse alveolar macrophages | Pyrogenic SAS (AEROSIL 300); precipitated SAS (FK 320) | 298, 176 m2/g | Degussa | 0, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, 100, 150 µg/cm2, 24 h, LDH, ROS | Dose-dependent cytotoxicity ≥10 µg/cm2 (pyrogenic), ≥40 µg/cm2 (precipitated); ROS ≥ 20 µg/cm2 (pyrogenic), ≥ 40 µg/cm2 (precipitated) | Gazzano et al. ( |
| MH-S | NM-200, NM-203 | 189, 203 m2/g | JRC | 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 µg/cm2;24,48, 72 h | ≥5 µg/m2: ↑inflammatory cytokines (NM-200 less than NM-203) | Di Cristo et al. ( |
| MH-S | NM-200, NM-203 | 14 nm (NM-200), 13 nm (NM-203)/189.2 m2/g and 203.9 m2/g | JRC | 1–100 mg/L, 24, 48, 72 h, viability (LDH), | NM-200: IC50 (72 h) 25–60 mg/L; | Farcal et al. ( |
| Fibroblasts | ||||||
| Mouse 3T3 fibroblasts | Ludox TM50* | 38 nm (hydrodynamic diameter, DLS) | Commercial | 5–100 mg/L for 24 h, XTT viability assay | Viability decreased to about 60 % at 100 mg/L; in DMEM with FCS increase in particle size due to agglomeration and reduced toxicity | Drescher et al. ( |
| Mouse 3T3 fibroblasts | Ludox SM sol* | 2–335 nm, 283–331 m2/g | Commercial | Cytotoxicity (WST-1), 24 h; aggregation; DMEM without serum | IC50 15–22 mg/L; toxicity is dependent of surface area | Rabolli et al. ( |
| Mouse 3T3 fibroblasts | Food-grade SAS | 14 nm/191 m2/g | Commercial | 0–15 mg/L (6 day); 0–30 mg/L (3 day); [silica was used as negative control] | No effects on MTT conversion and DNA content | Brunner et al. ( |
| Mouse embryonic fibroblast (NIH/3T3) | Stöber silica* | 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 150, 200 nm | Laboratory | 10–500 mg/L. 24, 72 h, viability, MTT, LDH | ≥100 mg/L: some cytotoxicity; at 500 mg/L, 60 nm particles caused an extreme reduction in viability | Kim et al. ( |
| Human skin and lung fibroblasts (WS1; CCD-966sk; MRC-5 s); | Precipitated from sodium silicate or TEOS* | 21, 80 (TEOS) nm; hydrodynamic size 188.3 and 236.3 (TEOS) | Laboratory | Up to 667 mg/L, 48 h, MTT, LDH | Slightly cytotoxic at high concentrations (≥138 mg/L); fibroblast cells with long doubling times more susceptible than tumour cells with short doubling times | Chang et al. ( |
| Nerve system | ||||||
| SH-SY5Y neuronal cell line | LUDOX® AS-20*, CL* and AM, polygon* | 16.9, 13.3, 15.3 nm; charge (pH, stabiliser): neg (9.1, NH4OH), pos (4.5, NaCl alumina coated, neg (8.9, sodium aluminate) | Commercial | 48 h, up to 1000 mg/L | Cell viability↓ at ≥100 mg/L (AS-20, AM) or >1000 mg/L (CL; MTT assay); intracellular ROS↑ at >100 mg/L only in AS-20 and AM-treated cells; Comet assay inconclusive | Kim et al. ( |
| Kidney | ||||||
| Human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells | Colloidal silica* | 20, 50 nm | Laboratory | 20–100 mg/L, 24 h; cell viability, mitochondrial function, cell morphology, ROS, GSH, thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS), cell cycle, apoptosis | IC50 (viability): 80–140 mg/L; ↑ROS ↓GSH, lipid peroxidation, G2/M phase arrest, and ↑apoptotic sub-G1 population | Wang et al. ( |
| Testicular cells | ||||||
| TM3 Leydig and TM4 Sertoli cells | NM-200, NM-203 | 14 nm (NM-200), 13 nm (NM-203)/189.2 m2/g and 203.9 m2/g | JRC | 0.125–200 mg/L, 24, 48, 72 h, viability (WST-1), | IC50 ≥ 100 mg/L in all cases | Farcal et al. ( |
d Day, DLS dynamic light scattering, DMEM/F-12 Dulbecco’s modified eagle medium/nutrient mixture F-12, FCS foetal calf serum, GSH glutathione, IC 50 concentration causing 50 % inhibition, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, MEM minimum essential medium, na not available, nr not reported, MTS cytotoxicity test based on the reduction in MTS tetrazolium compound by viable cell, MTT 3-(4,5-Dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazoliumbromide test, ROS reactive oxygen species, RT room temperature, SSA specific surface area
* Substance which does not fulfil the current EU criteria for E 551 (no star does, however, not necessarily implicate that the substance would be in compliance with EU E 551 specifications)