| Literature DB >> 29178961 |
Antonio Pietroiusti1, Enrico Bergamaschi2, Marcello Campagna3, Luisa Campagnolo4, Giuseppe De Palma5, Sergio Iavicoli6, Veruscka Leso7, Andrea Magrini4, Michele Miragoli8, Paola Pedata9, Leonardo Palombi4, Ivo Iavicoli7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a fundamental gap of knowledge on the health effects caused by the interaction of engineered nanomaterials (ENM) with the gastro-intestinal tract (GIT). This is partly due to the incomplete knowledge of the complex physical and chemical transformations that ENM undergo in the GIT, and partly to the widespread belief that GIT health effects of ENM are much less relevant than pulmonary effects. However, recent experimental findings, considering the role of new players in gut physiology (e.g. the microbiota), shed light on several outcomes of the interaction ENM/GIT. Along with this new information, there is growing direct and indirect evidence that not only ingested ENM, but also inhaled ENM may impact on the GIT. This fact, which may have relevant implications in occupational setting, has never been taken into consideration. This review paper summarizes the opinions and findings of a multidisciplinary team of experts, focusing on two main aspects of the issue: 1) ENM interactions within the GIT and their possible consequences, and 2) relevance of gastro-intestinal effects of inhaled ENMs. Under point 1, we analyzed how luminal gut-constituents, including mucus, may influence the adherence of ENM to cell surfaces in a size-dependent manner, and how intestinal permeability may be affected by different physico-chemical characteristics of ENM. Cytotoxic, oxidative, genotoxic and inflammatory effects on different GIT cells, as well as effects on microbiota, are also discussed. Concerning point 2, recent studies highlight the relevance of gastro-intestinal handling of inhaled ENM, showing significant excretion with feces of inhaled ENM and supporting the hypothesis that GIT should be considered an important target of extrapulmonary effects of inhaled ENM.Entities:
Keywords: Direct toxicity; Gastrointestinal tract; Indirect toxicity; Ingested nanoparticles; Inhaled nanoparticles; Microbiota; Workers’ exposure
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29178961 PMCID: PMC5702111 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-017-0226-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Studies addressing the effects of different NPs on viability of gastro-intestinal cellular models
| Nanoparticles | Physico-chemical NP properties | Cell line | Experimental design | Cytotoxic effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SW-CNTs | Surface functionalization: SW-CNTs modified with COOH-functional groups. | SW480 | Up to 24 h exposure to CNTs (0.5–2 μg per well) | After 4 and 24 h of exposure, CNTs did not have any cytotoxic effect, however there was a reduction in viability at 48 h and for the highest dose employed. | Kulamarva et al. 2008 [ |
| CdSe- QDs; CdSe-ZnS-PEG coated QDs | Surface characterization: ZnS shell and poly-ethylene glycol hydrophilic coating. | Caco-2 | Twenty four h exposure to native QDs or QDs incubated acidic medium (0–105 nmol/ml) | A dose dependent cytotoxicity for CdSe-QDs was detected. Toxic effects increased with increasing the Cd/Se ratio during synthesis. | Wang et al. 2008 [ |
| Au-nanorods | CTAB capped and PAA and PAH-coated Au-nanorods. | HT-29 | Four days exposure to Au-nanorods (0.4 nM) | CTAB-capped Au-nanorods displayed a significant cytotoxicity (65–75% loss of viability), independent of the aspect ratio. | Alkilany et al. 2009 [ |
| SW- CNTs | Size: average diameter of individual SW-CNT is 1.4 ± 0.1 nm, bundle dimensions are 4–5 nm × 0.5–1.5 μm | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to CNTs (5 and 1000 μg/ml) | A significant decrease in cell viability was detected at the higher concentrations: 500 and 1000 μg/ml. | Jos et al. 2009 [ |
| MW-CNTs | Impurities: traces of cobalt, nickel, zinc and lead | Caco-2 | Seventy-two h exposure to MW-CNTs (0–100 μg/ml) | No significant difference in CFE dose-effect relationship in comparison to controls. | Ponti et al. 2010 [ |
| ZnO-NPs | Size: 50–70 nm; | Lovo | Up to 72 h exposure to ZnO, (0–23 μg/ml) | ZnO-NPs induced a time- and dose-dependent decrease of cell number. Ten, 20 and 40 μg/cm2 induced <5% cell survival after 24 h. | De Berardis et al. 2010 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: <40 nm; | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h, or 10 days chronic exposure to TiO2-NPs (0–1000 μg/ml) | Little indication of any cell fatality compared to the controls was reported at both time points for all concentrations employed. | Koeneman et al. 2010 [ |
| Ag-NPs | – | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–10 μg/ml) | At 1 μg/ml cells did not show a significant viability decrease (LD50: ~5 μg Ag/ml). | Lamb et al. 2010 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size (mean ± SD): 20 ± 2–113 ± 8 nm; | Caco-2 and Raji B cells in co-culture | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–50 μg/ml) | No significant viability alterations were observed. | Bouwmeester et al. 2011 [ |
| Fe2O3, TiO2, SiO2, and ZnO nano-powders | Size: 3, 5, 10 and 8–10 for Fe2O3, TiO2, SiO2, and ZnO- NPs, respectively. | Caco-2 and RKO | Twenty-four h exposure to SiO2, TiO2, ZnO and Fe2O3 nano- powders (0–100 μg/cm2) in the presence or absence of TNF-α. | TiO2, SiO2, and Fe2O3 had minimal toxicity below 100 μg/cm2. | Moos et al. 2011 [ |
| Fullerenes; SW-CNTs | Surface functionalization: polyhydroxy small-gap fullerenes (OH-fullerenes), COOH-SW-CNTs; PEG-SW-CNTs. | Caco-2 cells | Twenty-four h exposure to carbon nanomaterials (0–1000 μg/ml) | All three carbon nanomaterials had minimum cytotoxicity on Caco-2 cells (range of 15.6–1000 μg/mL), | Coyuco et al. 2011 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 20, 40 nm; | Caco-2 | Up to 48 h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–100 μg/ml). | Time-, concentration- and particle size-dependent decrease in cell viability. More toxic effects for 20 nm compared to 40 nm sized Ag-NPs. | Böhmert et al. 2012 [ |
| SiO2-NPs; | Size: 14 and <10 nm for SiO2- and ZnO-NPs, respectively; | Caco-2 | Up to 24 h exposure to 0–80 μg/cm2 native or digestion simulated (DS) SiO2-, and ZnO-NPs. | SiO2-NPs and DS- SiO2-NPs reduced cell viability only in undifferentiated Caco-2 cells (even at 5 μg/cm2). | Gerloff et al. 2013 [ |
| TiO2-surface treated NPs | T-light SF NPs, a rutile core surrounded by an Al hydroxide layer, vs degradation residues generated after exposure to UV light (T light-DL) or acidic medium (T light-DA). | Caco-2 | Up to 72 h exposure to TiO2-surface treated NPs (0–100 μg/ml) | No cytotoxic effects were reported using Tripan blue, ATP, XTT and assays | Fisichella et al. 2012 [ |
| ZnO- NPs; | Size: 50–70 nm for ZnO-NPs and <25 nm for anatase TiO2-NPs. | Caco-2 | Six and 24 h exposure to ZnO, and TiO2-NPs (0–140 μg/ml) with or without inactivated foetal calf serum. | A dose-dependent decrease of cell viability after ZnO-NP exposure. | De Angelis et al. 2013 [ |
| Ag-NPs; | Size: 20–30, 21, 20 for Ag, TiO2, and ZnO-NPs, respectively; | Caco-2 and SW480 | Up to 48 h exposure to Ag, TiO2, and ZnO-NPs (0–100 μg/ml). | ZnO-NPs (10 and 100 μg/ml) were cytotoxic to both cell lines at 24 and 48 h exposure. | Abbot and Schwab, 2013 [ |
| TiO2- nanobelts; | TiO2 anatase nanobelts size: length (7 μm), width (0.2 μm), thickness (0.01 μm); | Caco-2/HT29-MTX co-culture | One and 24 h exposure to TiO2- nanobelts; | TiO2-nanobelts: only low levels of toxicity were observed. | Tilton et al. 2014 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: 21 nm (P25 Degussa); 10–25 nm (anatase); 30 nm (rutile); | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to TiO2-NPs (1 μg/ml). | No alterations in cell viability were detected by low LDH leak, and normal cell morphology. | Gitrowski et al. 2014 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: 12 ± 3 nm anatase NPs (95%); | Caco-2 mono-culture, Caco-2 and HT-29 and Caco-2 and Raji co-cultures. | Forty-eight h exposure to TiO2-NPs (0–200 μg/ml). | Exposure to TiO2-NPs did not cause overt cytotoxicity. | Brun et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs, | Size: ~90 nm for both NPs. | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-, and ZnO-NPs (0–200 μg/ml). | Ag- and ZnO-NPs significantly inhibited cell proliferation, with greater effects induced by ZnO-NPs (LD50 for ZnO-NPs: 0.431 μg/ml). | Song et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs; | Size: < 100 nm | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-, and Au-NPs (0–1000 μg/ml). | A dose-dependent toxic effect of Ag-NPs, with IC50 values of 16.7 and14.9 μg/ml derived from the MTT and trypan blue exclusion assays, respectively. | Aueviriyavit et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Mean primary size: 7.02 ± 0.68 nm; | Caco-2 | Up to 48 h exposure to primary or digested Ag-NPs (0–100 μg/ml). | Digested and undigested Ag-NPs decreased the cell viability of Caco-2 cells in a concentration-dependent manner. No differences emerged between NPs. | Böhmert et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 10–100 nm; | LoVo | Up to 48 h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–10 μg/ml). | Cell viability (24 h): At 10 μg/ml, the mitochondrial activity significantly decreased to 53% and to 85% compared to controls for cells exposed to 10 and 20 nm Ag-NPs, respectively. | Miethling-Graff et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 20 nm; | Caco-2 | Three h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–20 μg/ml). | A significant concentration (10–20 μg/ml) -dependent decrease in cell viability compared with controls. | Sahu et al. 2014 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: < 20 nm | Caco-2 and Raji B cells in co-culture | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–90 μg/ml) with or without phenolic compounds. | Ag-NPs decreased significantly | Martirosyan et al. 2014 [ |
| SiO2-NPs | Size: 50, 100, 200 nm; | Caco-2 | Six h exposure to SiO2-NPs incubated in fasting or fed state simulated gastric fluids (0–10 mg/ml). | Up to 6 h time point, no cytotoxicity was observed for all sized NPs. | Sakai-Kato et al. 2014 [ |
| SiO2-NPs | Size: 15 and 55 nm; | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to SiO2-NPs (0–256 μg/ml). | SiO2-NPs (55 nm): a decrease in cell viability (30%) was only observed at the highest tested dose (256 μg/ml). | Tarantini et al. 2015a [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: 12 ± 3 nm (anatase), 22 ± 4 nm (rutile); | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to TiO2-NPs (0–200 μg/ml). | Neither anatase, nor rutile NPs induced overt cell toxicity. | Dorier et al. 2015 [ |
| TiO2-NPs; | Size: 22–26 nm ± 10 nm (hydrophilic and hydrophobic TiO2-NPs); 14 ± 7, and 13 ± 6 nm for SiO2-NPs. | Caco-2 | Three and 10 day exposure to TiO2-NPs and SiO2-NPs (100 μg/ml) | Three day exposure: TiO2-NPs did not induce significant changes in the CFE of cells compared to controls. | Farcal et al. 2015 [ |
| TiO2-NPs; | Size: 50–70 for ZnO-NPs, and <25 nm for TiO2-NPs; | Caco-2 | Six and 24 h exposure to ZnO, and TiO2-NPs (0–128 μg/ml) | Only ZnO-NPs exert a strong cytotoxic effect on cells as determined by replication indexes. | Zijno et al. 2015 [ |
| ZnO-NPs | TEM size: 20 to 250/50 to 350 nm; | Caco-2 | Exposure to ZnO-NPs and ZnO-NPs in co-exposure to palmitic acid or free fatty acids | Dose dependent cytotoxic effects were detected for ZnO-NPs (EC50: 25 μg/ml I MTT assay). | Cao et al. 2015 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: 99 ± 30 and 26 ± 12 nm anatase NPs; | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to Native NPs and pretreated with digestive fluids (50 and 200 μg/ml) | After 24 h exposure, native NPs do not induce any clear loss of viability on cells. | Song et al. 2015 [ |
| SW-CNTs; MW-CNTs; | Size: SW-CNTs ranged between 1.04–1.71 nm; the layer of MW-CNTs is about 8.4 (± 0.9) graphite layers. | Caco-2 | Up to 72 h exposure to CNTs (0–100 μg/ml). | No significant decrease of cell viability was observed at 0.1, 1 and 10 μg/mL doses of four types of CNTs from 4 | Chen et al. 2015 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size (untreated NPs): mean radius: 3.2 ± 0.1 nm; width: 1.1 ± 0.3 nm; | Caco-2 | Twenty-four h exposure to untreated or digested Ag-NPs (0–100 μg/ml). | In up to 40 μg/ml Ag no reduction of viability was observed for both NPs. | Lichtenstein et al. 2015 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 50 nm; | Caco- 2 | Four h and 24 h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–50 μg/ml). | A significant concentration (10–50 μg/ml) -dependent decrease in cell viability compared with controls. | Sahu et al. 2016 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: < 20 nm. | Caco-2 and Raji B cells in co-culture | Three h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–90 μg/ml) with or without a phenolic compound. | Ag-NPs induced a dose-dependent decrease in cell viability. | Martirosyan et al. 2016 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 10–110 nm. | T84 | Fourty-eight h exposure to Ag-NPs (20 and 100 μg/ml). | Little to no change in cell viability compared to controls (acridine orange/ethidium bromide staining). | Williams et al. 2016 [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 20 and 200 nm. | Caco-2/TC7:HT29-MTX co-culture | Twenty-four h exposure to Ag-NPs (0–100 μg/ml). | Ag-NPs did not induce cytotoxicity at any of the tested concentrations in single cell lines or in co-culture. | Georgantzopoulou et al. 2016 [ |
| PVP capped Ag-NPs; | Ag-, TiO2-, and Au-NP size: < 20; 7–10 and 15, 80 nm, respectively. | Caco-2 mono-, and co-culture with THP-1, MUTZ-3 cells in a 3D model of intestinal mucosa | Twenty-four h exposure to NPs (0–625 μg/cm2) in both inflamed and not-inflamed conditions | Au-NPs and TiO2-NPs did not affect cell viability. | Susewind et al. 2016 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | TiO2-NP size; 50 and 100 nm (anatase); 50 nm (rutile); 21 nm (P25Degussa); | Caco-2 cells | Twenty-four, and 72 h exposure to NPs (0–50 μg/ml) | No change in Caco-2 cell viability was evident at 24 h-exposure. | Tada-Oikawa et al. 2016 [ |
| TiO2-NPs | Size: < 25 nm anatase NPs (99%); | HT-29 | Up to 48 h exposure to TiO2-NPs (0–36 μg/ml). | No significant cytotoxic effect of TiO2-NPs was observed in LDH and MTT assays at all concentrations | Ammendolia et al. 2017 [ |
Caco-2 cells human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells, CFE colony forming efficiency, COOH- SW-CNTs carboxylic acid functionalized single walled carbon nanotubes, CTAB cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, DLS dynamic light scattering, DS digestion simulated, EC half maximal effective concentration, HT-29 human colon carcinoma cells, HT29-MTX human adenocarcinoma mucus secreting cells, IC inhibition concentration, LD50 Lethal dose, LoVo human colon carcinoma cell line, MUTZ-3 human dendritic cells, MW-CNTs multi-walled carbon nanotubes, PAA polyacrylic acid, PAH polyelectrolyte poly(allylamine) hydrochloride, PEG poly-ethylene glycol, PEG-SW-CNTs poly(ethylene glycol) functionalized single walled carbon nanotubes, Raji B line human Burkitt’s lymphoma cells, RKO human colon adenocarcinoma cells, SW- CNTs single walled- carbon nanotubes, SW480 human colon adenocarcinoma cells, T84 human colonic epithelial cells, TEM transmission electron microscopy, THP-1 Human macrophages
Fig. 1Mechanisms of extrapulmonary effects of inhaled ENM. Legend: UFP = Ultrafine particles; NM = Nanomaterials. Reproduced from Environmental Health Perspective [140] (https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/EHP424/)
Different bio-corona and biological effects of nanoparticles reaching the gastro-intestinal tract through different modalities
| Modality | Primary bio-corona (before coming in contact with the GI tract) | Available information on changes of biocorona during GI Transit | Effects on biokinetics/activity | Relative amount of nanoparticles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ingested with food | Derived from interaction with food | Biocorona formed with the milk protein beta-lactoglobulin may be replaced by biliary salts in small intestine | The complex nano-particle/biliary salts may be efficiently absorbed in the small intestine. | High |
| Ingested with air (aerophagia) | No primary biocorona | A pepsin biocorona is formed in the stomach. | May affect the agglomeration status of nanoparticles | Low |
| Ingested after muco-ciliary clearance | Formed with surfactant phospholipids and proteins in the lung. | Unknown | Unknown | Substantial |
| Reaching the GI tract through systemic circulation (after lung crossing) | Formed with surfactant phospholipids and proteins in the lung. It may be partly modified by the contact with blood proteins (128) and by the contact with bile before being excreted in the gut | Unknown | Unknown | Low |