| Literature DB >> 28651647 |
Zahra Yarjanli1, Kamran Ghaedi2, Abolghasem Esmaeili1, Soheila Rahgozar1, Ali Zarrabi3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the recent decade, iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) have been proposed for several applications in the central nervous system (CNS), including targeting amyloid beta (Aβ) in the arteries, inhibiting the microglial cells, delivering drugs, and increasing contrast in magnetic resonance imaging. Conversely, a notable number of studies have reported the role of iron in neurodegenerative diseases. Therefore, this study has reviewed the recent studies to determine whether IONPs iron can threaten the cellular viability same as iron.Entities:
Keywords: Iron; Iron accumulation; Iron oxide nanoparticles; Neurodegenerative diseases; Oxidative stress; Protein aggregation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28651647 PMCID: PMC5485499 DOI: 10.1186/s12868-017-0369-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
The in vitro effects of IONPs
| Cell type | NP type | Size (nm) | Concentration (μg mL−1) | Coating | Functional group | Explantations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murine macrophage cell line (J774) | Fe2O3 | 30 | 25–500 | Tween 80 | Hydroxyl | Dose- and time-dependent reduction of viability, cell membrane damage, and induction of apoptosis by ROS [ |
| Chick cortical neurons | Fe3O4 | ∼10 | 2655, 5310 | Aminosilane | Amine | PEA, compared with others coatings, strongly declined metabolic activity and cell viability and destroyed cell membrane [ |
| Dextran | Hydroxyl | |||||
| PEA | Amine | |||||
| Porcine aortic endothelial cells | Fe3O4 | 5 or 30 | 500 | None (Bare) | Hydroxyl | Significant increasing of cell elongation and cell death were seen by bare NPs. Bare 30-NPs incited ROS formation; but coated 30-NPs and bare 5-NPs didn’t induce significant ROS formation. [ |
| Dextran | Hydroxyl | |||||
| PEG | Hydroxyl | |||||
| Human dermal fibroblast | Fe3O4 | 10 | 0–1000 | None (Bare) | Hydroxyl | Coating of NPs by TEOS-APTMS and APTMS intensified toxicity and led to a dose-dependent decreased viability, membrane damage, and declined the stability of DNA [ |
| 100–150 | 0–1000 | SiO2 and TEOS | Hydroxyl | |||
| 100–150 | 0–1000 | SiO2, TEOS, and APTMS | Amine | |||
| 10 | 0–1000 | APTMS | Amine | |||
| Human fibrosarcoma cells | Fe3O4 | 10 | 0–800 | None (Bare) | Hydroxyl | Membrane damage and decreased the stability of DNA [ |
| Rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12) | Fe2O3 | ∼36 | 25–200 | APTS | Amine | Increased ROS, reduced GSH, and induced apoptosis [ |
| Human breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) | Fe3O4 | ∼11 | 50–200 | None (Bare) | Hydroxyl | Dose-dependent reduction of viability [ |
| Human neuroblastoma cell line (SH-SY5Y) | Fe2O3 | ∼10 | 2.5–10 | None (Bare) | Hydroxyl | Decreased dopamine levels, induction of oxidative stress, and reducing of cell proliferation [ |
| ∼30 | 2.5–10 | Oleic acid and PEG | Carboxyl | |||
| Rat brain microvessel endothelial cells | Fe2O3 | ∼10 | 1, 10, and100 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Significant increase in ROS level by 10 nm-NPs. Damage to the membrane by both NPs [ |
| ∼30 | 1–100 | Oleic acid and PEG | Carboxyl | |||
| Human hepatocyte carcinoma cell line (Hep G-2) | Hollow sphere Fe2O3 | 200 | 25–200 | Carbon particles | Hydroxyl and carbonyl | Dose-dependent diminished viability [ |
| Mouse Fibroblastic Cell Line (L929) | Fe3O4 | 20 | 100 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Decreased toxicity of H2O2 [ |
| Rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12) | Fe3O4 | 20 | 100 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Decreased toxicity of MPP+ [ |
| Human Ovarian Cancer Cell Line (Skov-3) | Fe3O4 | 9.2 | 120–240 | PEG, PEI and Folic acid | Carboxyl and hydroxyl | Non-tixic [ |
| Human blood cells | Fe3O4 | <20 | 10–1000 | Oleylamine | Amine | Increased oxidative stress, dose-dependent DNA damage [ |
| Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (NIH3T3) | Fe3O4 | 15–20 | 0.032 and 0.065 | Oleate | Carboxyl | Dose and time dependent reduced viability [ |
| Mouse embryonic neural stem cells | Fe2O3 | ∼100a | 20–200 | bare | Hydroxyl | Severe diminished GSH, declined ROS, increased mitochondrial potential, long-term depolarization of cell membrane, and DNA damage [ |
| ∼100a | 20–200 |
| Hydroxyl | |||
| 100–150a | 20–200 | poly- | Amine |
The studies indicate Fe3+ is more toxic than Fe2+. Amine functional group often increases cytotoxicity. The toxicity of NPs is further dose- and time-dependent
APTMS aminopropyltrimethoxysilane, APTS aminopropyltriethoxysilane, PEA poly-(dimethylamine-coepichlorhydrin-co-ethylendiamine), PEG polyethylene glycol, PEI polyethylenimine, TEOS Tetraethylorthosilicate
aAggregate diameter
The in vivo effects of IONPs
| Organism (method) | NP type | Size (nm) | Concentration | Coating | Functional group | Explantations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat (Intratracheal instillation) | Fe3O4 | <50 | 1 and 5 mg kg−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Reduction of body weight [ |
| Rat (Oral) | Fe2O3 | 30 | 30, 300, and 1000 mg kg−1 day−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Significant inhibition of Na+–K+, Mg2+, and Ca2+ ATPases in brain, reduction of body weight in high dose, and reduced activity of acetyl choline esterase in the brain in high dose [ |
| Rat (Intranasal) | Fe2O3 | 36 | 20 µg µL−1 | APTS | Amine | Significant increased oxidative stress and delay in removing of NPs from stratum and hippocampus [ |
| Rat (Intravascular injection) | Fe2O3 | 10 | 50 mg kg−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Significantly decreased dopamine in striatum and dopaminergic neurons damage [ |
| Rat# (Injection into stratum) | Fe3O4 | 6.5 ± 3.0 | 3 µg NP 2 µL−1 in a CSF | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Increased body weight and reduction of oxidative stress in stratum [ |
| Mouse (Intravascular injection) | Fe3O4 | 5 | 0.4, 2, and 10 µg kg−1 | PEG | Hydroxyl | Induction of oxidative stress and DNA damage in heart [ |
|
| Fe3O4 | 20 | 200 μg mL−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Significant reduced ROS levels, enhanced climbing ability, and increased longevity in six-week-old flies [ |
| Green algae (Raphidocelis subcapitata) (Exposure) | Fe2O3 | 33.3* | 1–100 mg L−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Inhibition of growth by coated and uncoated NPs after 72 h [ |
| 50.4* | 1–100 mg L−1 | dimercaptosuccinic acid | Thiol and Carboxyl | |||
| Duckweed (Lemna minor) (Exposure) | Fe2O3 | 33.3* | 1–100 mg L−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Unaffected by NPs in this range of doses [ |
| 50.4* | 1–100 mg L−1 | dimercaptosuccinic acid | Thiol and Carboxyl | |||
| Water fleas (Daphnia magna) (Exposure) | Fe2O3 | 33.3* | 10–100 mg L−1 | None (bare) | Hydroxyl | Significant toxicity, the ingestion and accumulation of coated and uncoated IONPs in the gastrointestinal tract [ |
| 50.4* | 1–100 mg L−1 | Dimercaptosuccinic acid | Thiol and Carboxyl |
It is difficult to compare the in vivo effects of IONPs; because some studies don’t easily provide information of NPs; and in vivo interactions is more complex when compared with in vitro. Above studies proposed that Fe3+ is more toxic than Fe2+. IONPs reduced oxidative stress in drosophila and Parkinson model-rat, but in others were ineffective or toxic
#Parkinson model, * hydrate diameter
Fig. 1IONPs can cause iron accumulation, oxidative stress, and protein aggregation. IONPs present a large surface area for redox cycling [9]; in addition, the iron ions released from IONPs can also contribute to Fenton’s reaction, produce OH· from H2O2, and finally lead to oxidative stress [57]. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) may directly damage DNA, cell membrane, and organelle’s membrane. ROS result in release of Ca2+ and cytochrome C from mitochondria, and therefore, induction of apoptosis [11]. Furthermore, ROS leads to the release of iron from lysosomes and mitochondria through damaging organelle’s membrane, [18], and iron accumulation in cytosol. Both ROS and free iron interact with a number of proteins, change their conformation, and mediate their aggregation [25]
Fig. 2The summary of this study. Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) can activate a positive feedback-loop between iron accumulation, oxidative stress, and protein aggregation and therefore, they may lead to neurodegenerative disease