| Literature DB >> 29426889 |
C Distasi1, F A Ruffinatti2,3,4, M Dionisi2, S Antoniotti5,3, A Gilardino5,3, G Croci5, B Riva2, E Bassino5, G Alberto6,3, E Castroflorio7, D Incarnato5,8, E Morandi5,8, G Martra6,3, S Oliviero5,8, L Munaron5,3, D Lovisolo5.
Abstract
Engineered silica nanoparticles (NPs) have attracted increasing interest in several applications, and particularly in the field of nanomedicine, thanks to the high biocompatibility of this material. For their optimal and controlled use, the understanding of the mechanisms elicited by their interaction with the biological target is a prerequisite, especially when dealing with cells particularly vulnerable to environmental stimuli like neurons. Here we have combined different electrophysiological approaches (both at the single cell and at the population level) with a genomic screening in order to analyze, in GT1-7 neuroendocrine cells, the impact of SiO2 NPs (50 ± 3 nm in diameter) on electrical activity and gene expression, providing a detailed analysis of the impact of a nanoparticle on neuronal excitability. We find that 20 µg mL-1 NPs induce depolarization of the membrane potential, with a modulation of the firing of action potentials. Recordings of electrical activity with multielectrode arrays provide further evidence that the NPs evoke a temporary increase in firing frequency, without affecting the functional behavior on a time scale of hours. Finally, NPs incubation up to 24 hours does not induce any change in gene expression.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29426889 PMCID: PMC5807366 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21157-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Characterization of the lab-made silica NPs. Upper: representative TEM image (original magnification: X50k). Lower: related particle size distribution by TEM data (histogram; values on the left Y and bottom X axes) and hydrodynamic diameters by DLS in water (dashed-dotted line; values on the right Y and top X axes).
Figure 2Interaction with the plasmamembrane of GT1-7 cells and internalization of 50 nm SiO2 NPs. (a) Low magnification TEM image of a GT1-7 cell with NPs on the plasmamembrane and in a vescicle (2 hours incubation). Scale bar: 500 nm. (b) After either 1 or 2 hours of incubation, small agglomerates of NPs could be observed in association with the plasmamembrane; some of them were already incorporated into endocytic vesicles. Scale bars: 100 nm. (c) NPs density obtained by TEM images at 1 and 2 hrs of incubation. Mann-Whitney U test; ***p < 0.0001 two-tailed, n = 3. (d) Quantitative assessment of internalization at 1 and 24 hours of incubation by means of ICP-MS. t-test, *p = 0.037 two-tailed, n = 4.
Figure 3Four examples of the changes in electrical activity recorded from single cells in response to 20 µg mL−1 SiO2 NPs. Insets show expanded segments at the times indicated. Traces were blanked in correspondence to the application of the voltage clamp protocols as shown in Supplementary Fig. S1.
Figure 4Current clamp recordings from mouse DRG neurons. (a,b) Two examples of changes in Vm induced by 20 µg mL−1 SiO2 NPs. Inset in (b) shows action potential firing at expanded time scale.
Figure 5MEA recordings. (a) A representative raw signal featuring many EAPs, as displayed by the acquisition software MC_Rack (sampling frequency: 25 kHz). (b) 7 superimposed waveforms consisting of upward EAPs extracted from raw data. Each cutout extends from 1 ms before to 2 ms after the point where the signal crosses the threshold (horizontal dashed line) with a negative slope. Threshold was fixed at ± 6 standard deviations from the baseline noise. (c) A representative raster plot (lower trace) and the corresponding rate histogram (upper trace) of an active channel (the same shown in (e): Exp6, Ch43+). Bin size: 60 s. 10 spikes/bin ≈ 0.17 Hz. Dashed line is the time of NPs administration. (d) Schematic overview of the early changes induced by 20 µg mL−1 SiO2 NPs in GT1-7 EAP rate. Table refers only to the short temporal window (Δtpre + Δtpost) as shown in (e). (e) 8 complete raster plots (representative of 21) from the 7 experiments featuring the active channels used for the analysis. On the left side of each raster are the experiment number and the channel reference. Symbols + and − represent the direction (upward or downward respectively) of the EAPs detected. Dashed line is the time of medium change. (f) Global rate histogram resulting from the average of the rate histograms of all the 21 active units. Here, too, the dashed line is the time of medium change and NPs administration. (g) Low magnification image of GT1-7 cells pated on MEAs.
Figure 6Lack of detectable transcriptional responses to incubation with SiO2 NPs. Scatter plot with heat density of pairwise expression level comparison between treated and untreated (20 µg mL−1 of 50 nm SiO2 NPs) cells at 30 minutes, 1, 6 and 24 hrs post-treatment. Gene expression values (per kb per million total reads, RPKM) in log scale. Dots indicate each gene expressed in the two samples.