Literature DB >> 28367517

Evaluation of tumorigenic potential of CeO2 and Fe2O3 engineered nanoparticles by a human cell in vitro screening model.

Todd A Stueckle1, Donna C Davidson2, Raymond Derk2, Tiffany G Kornberg1, Diane Schwegler-Berry2, Sandra V Pirela3, Glen Deloid3, Philip Demokritou3, Sudjit Luanpitpong4, Yon Rojanasakul5, Liying Wang2.   

Abstract

With rapid development of novel nanotechnologies that incorporate engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) into manufactured products, long-term, low dose ENM exposures in occupational settings is forecasted to occur with potential adverse outcomes to human health. Few ENM human health risk assessment efforts have evaluated tumorigenic potential of ENMs. Two widely used nano-scaled metal oxides (NMOs), cerium oxide (nCeO2) and ferric oxide (nFe2O3) were screened in the current study using a sub-chronic exposure to human primary small airway epithelial cells (pSAECs). Multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNT), a known ENM tumor promoter, was used as a positive control. Advanced dosimetry modeling was employed to ascertain delivered vs. administered dose in all experimental conditions. Cells were continuously exposed in vitro to deposited doses of 0.18 μg/cm2 or 0.06 μg/cm2 of each NMO or MWCNT, respectively, over 6 and 10 weeks, while saline- and dispersant-only exposed cells served as passage controls. Cells were evaluated for changes in several cancer hallmarks, as evidence for neoplastic transformation. At 10 weeks, nFe2O3- and MWCNT-exposed cells displayed a neoplastic-like transformation phenotype with significant increased proliferation, invasion and soft agar colony formation ability compared to controls. nCeO2-exposed cells showed increased proliferative capacity only. Isolated nFe2O3 and MWCNT clones from soft agar colonies retained their respective neoplastic-like phenotypes. Interestingly, nFe2O3-exposed cells, but not MWCNT cells, exhibited immortalization and retention of the neoplastic phenotype after repeated passaging (12 - 30 passages) and after cryofreeze and thawing. High content screening and protein expression analyses in acute exposure ENM studies vs. immortalized nFe2O3 cells, and isolated ENM clones, suggested that long-term exposure to the tested ENMs resulted in iron homeostasis disruption, an increased labile ferrous iron pool, and subsequent reactive oxygen species generation, a well-established tumorigenesis promotor. In conclusion, sub-chronic exposure to human pSAECs with a cancer hallmark screening battery identified nFe2O3 as possessing neoplastic-like transformation ability, thus suggesting that further tumorigenic assessment is needed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  iron homeostasis; nano-scaled metal oxide; nanomaterial; neoplastic transformation; tumorigenesis

Year:  2016        PMID: 28367517      PMCID: PMC5372702          DOI: 10.1016/j.impact.2016.11.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NanoImpact        ISSN: 2452-0748


  86 in total

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8.  Comparative iron oxide nanoparticle cellular dosimetry and response in mice by the inhalation and liquid cell culture exposure routes.

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2.  Label-free identification of microplastics in human cells: dark-field microscopy and deep learning study.

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3.  Effect of surface functionalizations of multi-walled carbon nanotubes on neoplastic transformation potential in primary human lung epithelial cells.

Authors:  Todd A Stueckle; Donna C Davidson; Ray Derk; Peng Wang; Sherri Friend; Diane Schwegler-Berry; Peng Zheng; Nianqiang Wu; Vince Castranova; Yon Rojanasakul; Liying Wang
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5.  Toxicity assessment of metal oxide nanomaterials using in vitro screening and murine acute inhalation studies.

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6.  Iron Oxide Nanoparticle-Induced Neoplastic-Like Cell Transformation in Vitro Is Reduced with a Protective Amorphous Silica Coating.

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Review 7.  Micro- and Nanosized Substances Cause Different Autophagy-Related Responses.

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8.  Osteopontin mRNA expression by rat mesothelial cells exposed to multi-walled carbon nanotubes as a potential biomarker of chronic neoplastic transformation in vitro.

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Review 9.  Potential Toxicity and Underlying Mechanisms Associated with Pulmonary Exposure to Iron Oxide Nanoparticles: Conflicting Literature and Unclear Risk.

Authors:  Tiffany G Kornberg; Todd A Stueckle; James A Antonini; Yon Rojanasakul; Vincent Castranova; Yong Yang; Liying Wang
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2017-10-06       Impact factor: 5.076

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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-12-16       Impact factor: 5.923

  10 in total

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