| Literature DB >> 27942214 |
Andrea L Armstead1, Bingyun Li2.
Abstract
As the number of commercial and consumer products containing engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) continually rises, the increased use and production of these ENMs presents an important toxicological concern. Although ENMs offer a number of advantages over traditional materials, their extremely small size and associated characteristics may also greatly enhance their toxic potentials. ENM exposure can occur in various consumer and industrial settings through inhalation, ingestion, or dermal routes. Although the importance of accurate ENM characterization, effective dosage metrics, and selection of appropriate cell or animal-based models are universally agreed upon as important factors in ENM research, at present, there is no "standardized" approach used to assess ENM toxicity in the research community. Of particular interest is occupational exposure to tungsten carbide cobalt (WC-Co) "dusts," composed of nano- and micro-sized particles, in hard metal manufacturing facilities and mining and drilling industries. Inhalation of WC-Co dust is known to cause "hard metal lung disease" and an increased risk of lung cancer; however, the mechanisms underlying WC-Co toxicity, the inflammatory disease state and progression to cancer are poorly understood. Herein, a discussion of ENM toxicity is followed by a review of the known literature regarding the effects of WC-Co particle exposure. The risk of WC-Co exposure in occupational settings and the updates of in vitro and in vivo studies of both micro- and nano-WC-Co particles are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; engineered nanomaterial; lung disease; occupational exposure; particle; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27942214 PMCID: PMC5138053 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S121238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1Routes and potential detrimental effects of nanoparticle exposure.
Important components of NP toxicity testing
| Characterization | Primary particle size |
| Agglomerate size in suspension | |
| Size distribution range | |
| Elemental composition & contaminant levels | |
| Zeta potential | |
| Particle shape/morphology & density | |
| Dosage metrics | Mass per volume (mg/mL) |
| Surface area (μm3) | |
| Particle number | |
| Single or multi-dose & dose frequency | |
| Model system | In vitro: cell selection, mono- or co-culture model |
| In vitro: assay selection (MTT, LDH, etc) | |
| In vivo: animal selection (rat, mouse, etc) | |
| In vivo: method of exposure (inhalation, intra-tracheal instillation, injection, internal wear debris, etc) & exposure duration | |
| In vivo: sample collection (fluid, tissue, organ, etc) |
Abbreviations: LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; NP, nanoparticle.
Examples of in vitro models used in NP toxicity testing
| Cell type | NPs studied | NP size | NP dose | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human lung carcinoma (A549) | Cerium dioxide (CeO2) | 10 nm | 6.25, 25, or 100 μg/mL | |
| Human hepatocyte (C3A), human colon | Gold (Au)Cerium dioxide (CeO2) | 35 nm | 0–1,000 μg/mL | |
| adenocarcinoma (CaCo-2), primary trout hepatocytes | 25 nm | |||
| Human fibroblasts, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, macrophages | Cobalt chromium (CoCr) | 30 nm | 1–5,000 μm3/well | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) | Silicon dioxide (SiO2) | 43 nm | 25, 50, 100, 200 μg/mL | |
| Human lung epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) | Titanium dioxide (TiO2) | 25 nm | 5, 10, 20, 40 μg/mL | |
| Rat alveolar macrophages (RAW 264.7) | Crystalline silica (DQ12) | 960 nm | 1, 5, 10, 40 μg/cm2 | |
| Zinc oxide (ZnO) | 10 nm | |||
| Magnesium oxide (MgO) | 8 nm |
Abbreviation: NP, nanoparticle.
Examples of in vivo exposure models used in NP toxicity testing
| NP delivery method | Animal model | NPs studied | NP size | NP dose | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhalation | Mouse | Cadmium oxide (CdO) | 15 nm | 250 μg/m3 for 3 h/day ×7 days | |
| Rat | Magnetite (Fe3O4) | 1.3 μm | 4.7, 16.6, 52.1 μg/m3 for 6 h/day ×5 days/week ×13 weeks | ||
| Intra-tracheal instillation | Rat | Cerium dioxide (CeO2) | 191 nm | 10, 100, 400 μg per rat | |
| Mouse | Chitosan | 633 nm | 2 mg/kg | ||
| Injection | Mouse (periarticular injection) | Cobalt chromium (CoCr) | 32 nm | 1.2×106 μm3/25 g | |
| Rats (articular injection) | Cobalt chromium (CoCr) | 60 nm | 0.05, 0.25, 1.25 μg/mL | ||
| Ingestion (via GI tract) | Daphnia magna, Cyprius carpo (fish species) | Gold (Au) | 35 nm | 0–10 μg/mL |
Abbreviations: NP, nanoparticle; GI, gastrointestinal tract.
Summary of in vitro WC-Co toxicity studies
| Cell type | Particle size & dosage | Major outcome(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary rat type II pneumocytes | 2 μm | No changes in the levels of TNFα, IL-1, fibronectin or cystatin-C (compared to control) were observed after WC-Co exposure for 12 or 24 h in isolated rat type II pneumocytes | |
| Human colon adenocarcinoma (CaCo-2), human keratinocytes (HaCaT), human lung carcinoma (A549), OLN-93 oligodendroglial precursor cells, rat neurons, astrocytes | 145 nm | WC-Co particles exhibited significant toxicity at a concentration of 33 μg/mL after 3 days of exposure to CaCo-2, HaCaT, and A549 cells. Significant toxicity was also observed in astrocytes after exposure to 3.3 μg/mL and higher WC-Co concentration after 1 and 3 days. Primary rat neurons were not sensitive to WC-Co toxicity. Additionally, WC-Co particles were internalized into the cytoplasm of HaCaT, A549, and OLN-93 cells after 2 days | |
| Human peripheral blood mononucleated cells (PMBC) | 1 μm | After 15 min exposure to WC-Co, PMBC demonstrated 1.5-fold increase in DNA damage, marked by increased formation of micronuclei due to oxidative stress, compared to control and Co particle treatment alone | |
| Rainbow trout gill cells (RTgill-W1) | 145 nm | WC-Co caused significant reduction in cell viability after 3 h and 3 days of exposure in RTgill cells. WC-Co particles were also found to be internalized into the cytoplasm after 2 days | |
| Human keratinocyte (HaCaT) and hepato-cellular liver carcinoma (HepG2) cells | 145 nm | WC-Co internalization in HaCaT was confirmed; however, WC-Co did not cause significant toxicity at the concentrations studied after 1 h, 3 h, or 3 days. WC-Co particles did not induce reactive oxygen species (ROS) or DNA micronuclei nder the conditions tested | |
| Mouse peritoneal macrophages | 2 μm | After 18–24 h of exposure, WC-Co caused significant toxicity, marked by increased LDH release and significant induction of oxidative stress compared to control. Activated oxygen species were implicated in associated DNA damage (micronuclei) in macrophages | |
| Human keratinocytes (HaCaT) | 62 nm | WC-Co exposure caused significant changes in gene expression, such as | |
| Mouse peritoneal macrophages | 2–4 μm | The addition of 6% Co particles to each of the “carbide” particles significantly enhanced the toxicity of WC, TiC, and NbC in macrophages after 18 h exposure, marked by increased levels of LDH release compared to control and the various carbide particles alone. Enhanced toxicity was attributed to the interaction of Co with the carbides | |
| Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PMBC) | <1 μm | Exposure to WC-Co particles for 15 min caused altered gene expression after 6 and up to 24 h post-exposure in PMBC, including activation of HIF-1α, p53, and altered expression of | |
| Human PMBC | <1 μm | WC-Co particles caused cellular apoptosis, marked by annexin-V staining, after 15 min and 6 h of exposure. Apoptosis was induced via the caspase-9 pathway and DNA fragmentation was significantly elevated in WC-Co exposed cells compared to WC alone | |
| Human PMBC and human monocytes | <1 μm | A 24 h exposure to WC-Co caused significant up-regulation of apoptosis and stress response genes in both PMBC and monocytes, namely | |
| Human peripheral lymphocytes and mouse fibroblasts (3T3) | 2 μm | In lymphocytes, WC-Co caused significant induction of DNA strand breaks after 15 min of exposure, attributed to oxidative stress damage, and caused extensive DNA damage in isolated 3T3 cellular DNA compared to WC or Co particles alone | |
| Mouse epidermal cells (JB6) | 80 nm, 4 μm | Nano-WC-Co induced greater oxidative stress and hydroxyl radicals, marked by significantly decreased cellular GSH levels, in JB6 cells compared to micro-WC-Co. Nano-WC-Co also stimulated induction of | |
| Rat alveolar macrophages (AM) and type II pneumocytes | 2 μm | After 24 h exposure to WC-Co, significant toxicity was observed in AM, but not in type II pneumocytes, compared to controls. However, type II cells were more sensitive toward Co toxicity than AM, in the absence of WC components | |
| Lung epithelial cells | 4 μm and 80 nm of WC-Co | Nano-WC-Co was more toxic than micro-WC-Co | |
| Lung epithelial cells, macrophages, and their co-culture | 80 nm of WC-Co | Toxicity of nano-WC-Co was cell dependent, macrophages in the co-culture may play a protective role against nano-WC-Co-mediated toxicity, and nano-WC-Co exposure stimulated the M1 phenotype of macrophages |
Abbreviations: TNF, tumor necrosis factor; IL, interleukin; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; WC-Co, tungsten carbide cobalt.
Figure 2Cell viability after (A) nano-WC-Co and (B) micro-WC-Co particle exposure and (C) oxidative stress indicated by DCF fluorescence after exposure to 1,000 μg/mL nano- and micro-WC-Co particles.86 *P<0.05, #P<0.001 compared to control, ‡P<0.05 compared to micro-WC-Co.
Note: Reproduced from Armstead AL, Arena CB, Li B. Exploring the potential role of tungsten carbide cobalt (WC-Co) nanoparticle internalization in observed toxicity toward lung epithelial cells in vitro. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2014;278(1):1–8.86
Abbreviations: DCF, 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein; WC-Co, tungsten carbide cobalt.
Summary of in vivo WC-Co toxicity studies
| Method of delivery | Animal model & particle size | WC-Co dosage | Major outcome(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intra-tracheal instillation (IT) | Rat | Single IT bolus at high dose (≥1 mg/kg body weight) | At 6 months following single IT WC-Co exposure, rats presented with pulmonary edema, alveolar congestion, and lung fibrosis in regions of deposited WC-Co dusts | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 1 mg/100 g body weight | WC-Co caused high mortality with massive pulmonary edema, increased macrophage counts, LDH, albumin and total protein content at 24 h post-exposure | |
| IT | Rat | Single and repeated IT bolus at 1, 5, or 10 mg/kg body weight | Single IT WC-Co exposure caused acute alveolitis which persisted for about 1 month following the IT bolus. Repeated weekly exposure (4× for 1 month) caused interstitial lung fibrosis and increased lung hydroxyproline levels in exposed rats | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 16.6 mg/kg body weight | WC-Co exposure caused significant elevation of LDH, total protein & albumin in BAL fluids after 12 h and up to 72 h following exposure. In rat type II pneumocytes isolated after IT exposure, increased induction of micronuclei was observed, indicating genotoxicity and DNA damage | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 1 mg/100 g body weight | 24 h after single IT WC-Co exposure, significant increases in LDH, total protein, and albumin were found in BAL fluids. WC-Co did not exert any effects on the levels of IL-1, TNFα, fibronectin, or cystatin-C in BAL fluids of exposed animals | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 2.5, 5, or 10 mg/100 g body weight | Pulmonary edema, fibrin formation, and increased number of inflammatory cells were observed in WC-Co-exposed rat lungs, along with decreased reactivity to methacholine, increased levels of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), LDH, total protein and albumin in BAL fluids | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 1 or 3 mg per rat | A significant increase in LDH was observed after 1, 4, 7, and 30 days of WC-Co exposure and fibrosis alveolitis developed in rats after 30 days post-IT exposure | |
| IT | Rat | Single IT bolus at 0–500 μg per rat | A consistent lack of acute local pulmonary inflammation was observed in terms of the BAL fluid parameters examined in animals exposed to WC-Co NPs while significant acute pulmonary inflammation was observed in the CeO2 NP group |
Abbreviations: BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; NP, nanoparticle; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; WC-Co, tungsten carbide cobalt.
Figure 3Pulmonary inflammation parameters assessed in the BAL fluid following 24 h exposure to WC-Co and CeO2 NPs: (A) LDH activity, (B) albumin, and (C) AM chemiluminescence.96 Values presented as mean ± SD. *P<0.05, ‡P<0.001 compared to the vehicle control, and #P<0.01 compared to WC-Co NP exposed groups.
Notes: Reproduced from Armstead AL, Minarchick VC, Porter DW, Nurkiewicz TR, Li B. Acute inflammatory responses of nanoparticles in an intra-tracheal instillation rat model. PLoS One. 2015;10(3):e0118778.96
Abbreviations: BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; AM, alveolar macrophage; SD, standard deviation; NP, nanoparticle; WC-Co, tungsten carbide cobalt.