| Literature DB >> 28250714 |
Bartlomiej Sojka1, Aurelia Liskova2, Miroslava Kuricova2, Mateusz Banski1, Jan Misiewicz1, Maria Dusinska3, Mira Horvathova2, Silvia Ilavska2, Michaela Szabova2, Eva Rollerova4, Artur Podhorodecki1, Jana Tulinska2.
Abstract
Sodium fluoride-based β-NaLnF4 nanoparticles (NPs) doped with lanthanide ions are promising materials for application as luminescent markers in bio-imaging. In this work, the effect of NPs doped with yttrium (Y), gadolinium (Gd), europium (Eu), thulium (Tm), ytterbium (Yb) and terbium (Tb) ions on phagocytic activity of monocytes and granulocytes and the respiratory burst was examined. The surface functionalization of <10-nm NPs was performed according to our variation of patent pending ligand exchange method that resulted in meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) molecules on their surface. Y-core-based NCs were doped with Eu ions, which enabled them to be excited with UV light wavelengths. Cultures of human peripheral blood (n = 8) were in vitro treated with five different concentrations of eight NPs for 24 h. In summary, neither type of nanoparticles is found toxic with respect to conducted test; however, some cause toxic effects (they have statistically significant deviations compared to reference) in some selected doses tested. Both core types of NPs (Y-core and Gd-core) impaired the phagocytic activity of monocytes the strongest, having minimal or none whatsoever influence on granulocytes and respiratory burst of phagocytic cells. The lowest toxicity was observed in Gd-core, Yb, Tm dopants and near-infrared nanoparticles. Clear dose-dependent effect of NPs on phagocytic activity of leukocytes and respiratory burst of cells was observed for limited number of samples.Entities:
Keywords: Health effects; Hydrophilic; Lanthanide ions; Nanocrystals; Nanomedicine; Phagocytes; Toxicity; β-NaLnF4
Year: 2017 PMID: 28250714 PMCID: PMC5306425 DOI: 10.1007/s11051-017-3779-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanopart Res ISSN: 1388-0764 Impact factor: 2.253
Fig. 1Photoluminescence spectra of hydrophilic UV (green) and NIR (blue) excited nanocrystals
Fig. 2Exemplary TEM picture of samples after functionalization. Inset: nanoparticles’ size distribution
List of nanoparticles used in this work
| NP name | Core type | Dopant | Exact crystal structure | Excitation type | Functionalization time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NP1 | Y-core | Eu(2%) | NaYF4 | UV | 21 h |
| NP2 | NaYF4 | 18 h | |||
| NP3 | Gd-core | Tm(1%) Yb(10%) | NaGdF4 | NIR | 18 h |
| NP4 | NaGdF4 | 21 h | |||
| NP5 | Eu(5%) Tb(2%) | NaGdF4 | UV | 18 h | |
| NP6 | Eu(5%) Tb(10%) | NaGdF4 | 18 h | ||
| NP7 | NaGdF4 | 16 h | |||
| NP8 | NaGdF4 | 8 h |
Fig. 3The effect of sodium fluoride-based nanocrystals doped with lanthanide ions on phagocytic activity of monocytes (a) and granulocytes (b) evaluated using ingestion of fluorescein-labelled Staphylococcus aureus and the respiratory burst (c) monitored using hydroxyethidine by flow cytometry. Results are expressed as percentage of phagocytic activity and respiratory burst (mean + SEM). Bars indicate mean group activity in peripheral blood cultures in vitro treated with different concentrations of NPs: 0 μg/cm2 (control), 0.12 μg/cm2, 0.6 μg/cm2, 3 μg/cm2, 15 μg/cm2, 75 μg/cm2, CYF—suppressive control exposed to cyclophosphamide 40 mg/ml. The assay was performed after 24 h in vitro exposure of the peripheral blood cells (n = 8 human volunteers). Statistical significance: *p < 0.05 (red), **p < 0.01 (orange), ***p < 0.001 (yellow)