| Literature DB >> 29414923 |
Veruscka Leso1, Ivo Iavicoli2.
Abstract
The increasing technological applications of palladium nanoparticles (Pd-NPs) and their consequent enhancing release into the community and occupational environments, have raised public health concerns regarding possible adverse effects for exposed subjects, and particularly for workers chronically and highly exposed to these materials, whose toxico-kinetic and dynamic behavior remains to be fully understood. Therefore, this review aimed to critically analyze literature data to achieve a more comprehensive knowledge on the toxicological profile of Pd-NPs. Results from available studies demonstrated the potential for these chemicals to affect the ecosystem function, to exert cytotoxic and pro-inflammatory effects in vitro as well as to induce early alterations in different target organs in in vivo models. However, our revision pointed out the need for future studies aimed to clarify the role of the NP physico-chemical properties in determining their toxicological behavior, as well as the importance to carry out investigations focused on environmental and biological monitoring to verify and validate experimental biomarkers of exposure and early effect in real exposure contexts. Overall, this may be helpful to support the definition of suitable strategies for the assessment, communication and management of Pd-NP occupational risks to protect the health and safety of workers.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers of effect; biomarkers of exposure; cytotoxic effects; ecotoxicity; in vivo toxicity; palladium nanoparticles; risk assessment; risk management
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29414923 PMCID: PMC5855725 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19020503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Studies investigating the effects of Pd-NPs on in vitro models.
| Palladium-NP Characterization | Investigated Models | Experimental Design | Endpoints | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Size: 1–12 nm | Barley | Seeds were cultivated in a floating hydroponic system containing a nutrient solution (0–50 μmol Pd/L) for 1 week | Leaf length | Leaf length significantly decreased according to the increased exposure concentrations (105–115 mm after 50 μmol Pd vs. 120–125 mm of unexposed plants). | Battke et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs entrapped in an aluminum hydroxide matrix | Lettuce seeds | Seeds were planted immediately (day 0) or 15 day after adding NPs to the soil (0.013 and 0.066% | Seed germination and growth | Shoot/root ratio: no significant influence. | Shah and Bazelerova, [ |
| Size: 5–10 nm | Kiwifruit pollen from plants of the male genotype of | Pollen was exposed to 0–7 mg/L NPs for up to 90 min | Pollen performance and lethality | Tube emergence and growth: significant inhibition began at 0.1 mg/L, complete growth cessation at 0.4 mg/L. | Speranza et al. [ |
| Halloysite supported Pd-NPs. | High and low vigor | Radish seeds were exposed to 10 mL of nanomaterials at concentrations ranging 0–1500 mg/L for up to 72 h | Germination and seedling development | Exposure to Halloysite -PdNPs had no significant influence on germination, seedling development, xylem differentiation, or mitotic index in both lots. | Bellani et al. [ |
| Chemical composition: Pd/magnetite; | RTgill-W1 | Cells were exposed to 5–25 mg/L NPs for 1 h and 3 days | Cell viability | Metabolic activity and membrane integrity showed a significant decrease after 1 h exposure due to cellular stress. Cell viability was full restored after 3 days. | Hildebrand et al. [ |
| Size: 10 ± 6 nm | Rat-1 | Cells were exposed to 1 and 2 μg/mL NPs for 2–120 h | Cell viability; Oxidative stress reaction; cell cycle distribution; DNA damage | Cell viability was significantly reduced by both concentrations at 120 h. | Iavicoli et al. [ |
| Size: 5–10 nm | PBMCs from 8 non-atopic healthy donors | Cells were overnight incubated with NPs (10−5, 10−6 M), with or without 10 μg/mL LPS stimulation | Cell viability; Cytokine release | Cell viability: not affected by all conditions of exposure. | Boscolo et al. [ |
| Size: 5–10 nm | PBMCs from 12 non-atopic and 8 atopic donors | Cells were overnight incubated with NPs (10−5 M), with or without 10 μg/mL LPS stimulation | Cell viability; Cytokine release | Cell viability: not affected by all conditions of exposure. | Reale et al. [ |
| Chemical composition: Pd/magnetite; | Caco-2, Hacat | Cells were exposed to 5–25 mg/L NPs for 1 h and 3 days | Cell viability; | Hacat cells: viability was reduced to app. 91 ± 3% for all tested concentrations. After 3 days cell viability recovered up to 94% except with highest dose. Caco-2 cells showed similar tendency. No significant ROS production was demonstrated in comparison to controls. | Hildebrand et al. [ |
| Size: 10.4 ± 2.7 nm; | PBECs, A549 | Cells were exposed to 0–25 μg/mL NPs for 24 h | Cell viability; | Cell viability: no alterations up to 10 μg/mL, decreased by higher concentrations. | Wilkinson et al. [ |
| Zerovalent NPs; | PBMCs from healthy donors | Cells were exposed to 0–80 μg/mL NPs for 4–72 h following PHA stimulation (48 h) | Cell viability; | No alterations in cell viability (4 h); Significant reduction at 80 (24 h), 20 (48 h) and 10 μg/mL (72 h). | Petrarca et al. [ |
| Size: 3.8 ± 0.4–26.6 ± 2.2 nm; | THP-1 | Cells were exposed to 0–450 μg/mL NPs | Oxidative stress reaction | A linear dependence of ROS production was evident up to 100 μg/mL. Above this level ROS levels were leveled off. | Neubauer et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs obtained through leaf extracts of | A2780 | Cells were exposed to 0–10 μg/mL NPs for 24 h | Cell viability; Oxidative stress reaction | Cell viability: doses greater than 6 μg/mL NPs induced a significant reduction compared to controls. | Gurunathan et al. [ |
| Pd nanosheets; positively charged CA-Pd nanosheets; Negatively charged 3-MPA-Pd-nanosheets | HepG2 | Cells were incubated with nanosheets at 0–100 ppm for 24 h | Cell viability | Pd nano-sheets: 93.2 ± 6.8% at 50 ppm; 74.7 ± 8.5% at 100 ppm. | Pan et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs synthesized through leaf extract of | HepG2 | Cells were incubated with nanosheets at 0–500 μg/mL | Cell viability | Cytotoxicity was 8.5, 24, 48, 65, and 76.5% of cells treated with 1, 10, 100, 250, 500 μg/mL. | Rajakumar et al. [ |
| Pd-nanocubes | HeLa | Cells were exposed to 425 μg/mL Pd-nanocubes for 24 h | Cell viability | Percent of non-viable cells (necrotic or late apoptotic): 6.6% with serum, 14.7% without serum. | Dahal et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs and bimetallic Pt-Pd-NPs obtained through the extract of | HeLa | Cells were exposed to 10 μg/mL NPs for 48 h | Cell viability | Reduced by 33.15% by Pd-NPs and by 74.25% by Pt-Pd-NPs. | Ghosh et al. [ |
| Size: 10 ± 6 nm | A549 | Cells were exposed to 1 and 2 μg/mL NPs for 4–120 h | Cell viability; Oxidative stress reaction; cell cycle distribution; DNA damage | Cell viability was significantly reduced by 2 μg/mL NPs at 96 and 120 h. | Iavicoli et al. [ |
| Shape: spherical; | Bronchial mucosa 3D model: PBECs and MRC-5 | Bronchial cells [stimulated or not with IL-13 (1 ng/mL)] were exposed to aerosolized NPs at 250, 400 and 650 ng/cm2 for 24 h | Cell viability; | No alterations in cell viability. | Ji et al. [ |
| Mean size (±SD): 14.70 ± 2.30 nm | A375 | Cells were exposed to 0–40 μg/mL NPs for 24 and 48 h | Cell viability; Oxidative stress reaction; | Cell viability: dose- and time-dependent significant reduction (62.3% and 75.94% decrease at 24 and 48 h, compared to controls). | Alarifi et al. [ |
| Size: 1–10 nm; | Human eosinophilic cell line AML14.3D10 and freshly isolated eosinophils | Cells were incubated with 0–150 μg/mL NPs for up to 24 h | Cell viability; Oxidative stress reaction | Cell viability: no significant alterations in necrotic and apoptotic cells. | Chhay et al. [ |
3D model, three dimensional model; A2780, human ovarian cancer cells; A375, human skin malignant melanoma cells; A549, transformed alveolar basal human epithelial cells; CA, cysteamine; Caco-2 cells, human colon adenocarcinoma cells; HaCat, human keratinocyte cells; HeLa, human epithelial cervical cancer cells; HepG2, human liver cancer cell line G2; LC50, lethal concentration 50; LPS, lypoplysaccharide; MPA, mercaptopropionic acid; n.s., not significant; MRC-5, human fetal lung fibroblast cells; NPs, nanoparticles; Pd, palladium; PBECs, primary bronchial epithelial cells; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; PHA, phytohemagglutinin-L; PBMCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; Rat-1, rat embryo fibroblasts; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SD, standard deviation; THP-1, human monocyte leukaemia cells.
Studies investigating the effects of Pd-NPs on in vivo models.
| Palladium-NP Characterization | Investigated Models | Experimental Designs | Endpoints | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pd-NPs entrapped in an aluminum hydroxide matrix | Microcosm soil | NPs were added to the soil at a final concentration of 0.013% or 0.066% ( | Bacterial growth | No significant effects on the number of colony forming units or on the total soil community metabolic fingerprint. | Shah and Belozerova, [ |
| Bimetallic Pd-iron NPs | Bacterial strain was exposed to 0–0.5 g/L | Bacterial growth | No differences compared to controls were evident up to 0.1 g/L, whereas bacterial growth was significantly inhibited with greater NP concentrations. | Murugesan et al. [ | |
| Size: 2.0 ± 0.1; 2.5 ± 0.2; 3.1 ± 0.2 nm. | Gram negative | Bacteria were exposed to 2.5 × 10−4, 10−5, 10−6, 10−7, 10−8, and 10−9 M for each size of NPs for 24 h | Bacterial growth | A significant decrease in the amount of colonies/mL over the 24 h exposure time, at the 10−4–10−6 M concentrations was evident for both microorganisms. | Adams et al. [ |
| Pt-Pd polyaniline nanocomposites | Gram positive ( | Bacteria were incubated with 0–150 μg/mL pristine anyline, Pt-Pd bimetal NPs and Pt-Pd polyaniline nanocomposites for 24 h | Bacterial growth | The maximum zone of inhibition (mm in diameter) was observed for polyaniline/Pt-Pd nanocomposite against | Boomi et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs obtained throuh methanolic extraction from | Gram negative | - | Bacterial growth | Good antibacterial activity was reported for both Gram positive and Gram negative bacterial strains. | Surendra et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs obtained through bio-precipitation in bacterial cultures | Marine Gram negative bacterium | Bacterial growth of | Acute toxicity: no significant effects. | Nuzzo et al. [ | |
| Pd-NPs obtained through leaf extract of | MDR clinical isolate | Bacterial cultures (1 mL) were incubated with 0–0.65 mM NPs up to 24 h | Bacterial and biofilm growth | Bactericidal activity: a 31.67 ± 1.53 mm diameter zone of inhibition was evident around the Pd-NP well. | Hazarika et al. [ |
| Size: 10 ± 6 nm | Female Wistar rats | Animals were exposed to a single intravenous injection of Pd-NPs at 0–12 µg/kg dose. Serum cytokine concentrations were assessed at the 14th day post-exposure | Effects on the immune system | The highest dose of Pd-NPs (12 μg/kg) induced a significant increase of IL-1α, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, GM-CSF and INF-γ compared to controls. | Iavicoli et al. [ |
| Female Wistar rats | Animals were exposed to repeated (on day 1, 30 and 60) intravenous injections of Pd-NPs at 0–12 µg/kg dose. Serum cytokine concentrations were assessed at the 90th day post-exposure | Effects on the immune system | The highest dose of Pd-NPs (12 μg/kg) induced a significant reduction of IL-1α, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and GM-CSF compared to controls. | Iavicoli et al. [ | |
| Female Wistar rats | Animals were exposed to a single intravenous injection of Pd-NPs at 0–12 µg/kg dose. Urinary protein concentrations were analyzed at the 14th day post exposure | Effects on the renal system | RBP: significantly increased in the 12 µg/kg group (0.23 ± 0.07 mg/mL) compared to controls (0.11 ± 0.03 mg/mL). | Fontana et al. [ | |
| Female Wistar rats | Animals were exposed to a single intravenous injection of Pd-NPs at 0–12 µg/kg dose. E2, FSH, LH, P and T levels were determined in the serum samples collected 14 days after exposure | Effects on the endocrine system | Dose 12 μg/kg: a significant reduction of E2 (0.012 ± 0.002 ng/mL) and T (0.47 ± 0.04 ng/mL) concentrations and an increase of LH levels (23.09 ± 1.07 ng/mL) compared to controls (E2: 0.032 ± 0.006; T: 0.80 ± 0.76; LH: 16.48 ± 1.31 ng/mL). | Leso et al. [ | |
Caco-2 cells, human colon adenocarcinoma cells; E2, estradiol; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor; HaCat cells, human keratinocyte cells; IL, interleukin; INF-γ, interferon-γ; LH, luteinizing hormone; MBC, minimum bactericidal concentration; MDR, multidrug resistant; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentration; NPs, nanoparticles; P, progesterone; RBP, retinol binding protein; T, testosterone.