| Literature DB >> 29534471 |
Ivo Iavicoli1, Veruscka Leso2, Luca Fontana3, Edward J Calabrese4.
Abstract
The concept of hormesis, as an adaptive response of biological systems to moderate environmental challenges, has raised considerable nano-toxicological interests in view of the rapid pace of production and application of even more innovative nanomaterials and the expected increasing likelihood of environmental and human exposure to low-dose concentrations. Therefore, the aim of this review is to provide an update of the current knowledge concerning the biphasic dose-responses induced by nanoparticle exposure. The evidence presented confirmed and extended our previous findings, showing that hormesis is a generalized adaptive response which may be further generalized to nanoscale xenobiotic challenges. Nanoparticle physico-chemical properties emerged as possible features affecting biphasic relationships, although the molecular mechanisms underlining such influences remain to be fully understood, especially in experimental settings resembling long-term and low-dose realistic environmental exposure scenarios. Further investigation is necessary to achieve helpful information for a suitable assessment of nanomaterial risks at the low-dose range for both the ecosystem function and the human health.Entities:
Keywords: dose–response relationship; hormesis; low doses; nanomaterial
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534471 PMCID: PMC5877666 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19030805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Main industrial uses and consumer product applications of engineered nanomaterials.
In vitro studies demonstrating the presence of a nanoparticle induced hormetic dose–response.
| Type of Nanoparticles | NP-Physicochemical Characterization | Cell Line Investigated | Experimental Design | Assessed Endpoint | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ag-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 10 and 100 nm; Hydrodynamic diameter: 19.6 ± 0.5, 99.5 ± 0.3 nm. | HepG2 | Cells were exposed to 1 and 2 μg/mL NPs for up to 72 h. | Cell viability | Cell viability increased to ~125% and ~150% relative to controls with 10 and 100 nm Ag-NPs after 48 and 72 h treatments with both exposure concentrations. | Jiao et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 30 nm. | Caco2 | Cells were exposed to 0–100 μg/mL NPs for up to 36 h. | Cell viability | Cell viability was slightly (n.s.) increased by 10, 25, 50 μg/mL Ag-NPs for 36 h, and was reduced by higher doses at all 3 time points. | Kang et al. [ |
| Colloidal (c-) and powder (p-) Ag-NPs | Shape: near-spherical to elongated (p-Ag-NPs); spherical c-Ag-NPs; Size: 37.0 ± 13.0 nm (p-Ag-NPs); 16.6 ± 4.4 nm (c-Ag-NPs); Hydrodynamic diameter: 690.6 ± 74.5 (p-Ag-NPs); 242.5 ± 93.5 nm (c-Ag-NPs). | A549 | Cells were exposed to c-Ag-NPs (5 μg/cm2) or p-Ag-NPs (2.5 μg/cm2) for 24 h followed by 80 or 60 μg/cm2 NPs, respectively, or acrolein as an environmental pollutant (100 μM). | Cell viability | Cell viability increased in cells pre-treated with low concentrations of NPs (2.5 and 5 μg/cm2), compared to cells directly exposed to the toxic challenge. | Sthijns et al. [ |
| NDs and SiO2-NPs | Size: <10 nm (NDs); 12 nm SiO2-NPs. | FSF1 | Cells were exposed to 0–100 μg/mL NPs for 48 h. | Cell viability | Cell viability was significantly increased by 0.5–2.5 μg/mL SiO2-NPs and 0.5 μg/mL NDs. Above 5 μg/mL there was a progressive decrease. | Mytych et al. [ |
A549, human lung adenocarcinoma cells; Ag-NPs, Silver nanoparticles; Caco2, human epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma cells; FSF1, Normal diploid human facial skin fibroblasts; HepG2, human hepatoma derived cell line; n.s., not significant; NDs, nanodiamonds; SiO2-NPs, silica nanoparticles.
In vivo studies demonstrating the presence of a nanoparticle induced hormetic dose–response.
| Type of Nanoparticles | NP-Physicochemical Characterization | In Vivo Model | Experimental Design | Assessed Endpoint | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEG- and PVP-coated Ag-NPs | PEG-Ag-NPs Shape: spherical; Size: 2.8 ± 0.47; 4.7 ± 0.20; 10.5 ± 0.59 nm. | Bacteria were exposed to 0–65 μg/mL NPs for 6 h. | Bacteria viability | PEG-Ag-NPs: higher survival rates, 6%, 7% and 13% were induced by 2.8, 4.7 and 10.5 nm NPs at 2.2, 1.8 and 2.0 μg/mL, respectively. | Xiu et al. [ | |
| PVP coated-Ag-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 7.59 ± 2.92 nm; Hydrodynamic diameter: 27.1 ± 2.2 nm. | Bacteria were exposed to 0.34–5.1 μg/mL NPs with or without cysteine (12.5 μg/mL). | Bacterial viability | Viability (without cysteine): 29.9% increase in bacteria treated with 0.34 μg/mL NPs compared to controls. | Guo et al. [ | |
| NM-300 Ag-NPs; Mesosilver containing Ag-NPs | Size: 18.2 ± 7.3 and 14.0 ± 6.9 nm for NM-300 and Mesosilver, respectively. | Gram-positive bacteria | Bacteria were exposed to 0–1 μg/mL Ag-NPs (NM- 300) and Ag-NPs in a household product. Responses could be detected within 0.5–1 h. | O2 uptake | Gram-negative strain | Echarri-Bravo et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 35 nm; Hydrodynamic diameter: 35.4 ± 5.1 nm | Transcriptional response to Ag-NP exposure | Ag-NPs had no significant effect on | Yang et al. [ | ||
| PVP-coated Ag-NPs | Size: 10 nm. | Mixed culture of the effluent from West University Place wastewater treatment plant | Mixed and | Biofilm formation | The biofilm coverage fractions were 0.9 ± 0.2% for control, 0.9 ± 0.3% for PVP, 1.1 ± 0.3% for Ag+, and 5.2 ± 2.1% for PVP-Ag-NPs in the mixed culture. | Yang and Alvarez [ |
| PVP-coated Ag-NPs | Size: 10, 30 and 100 nm. | Sediment slurry of the Yangtze Estuary | Sediment slurry was exposed to NPs 0–10,000 μg/L for 30 h. | N2O production | Nitrifier N2O production to Ag-NPs exhibited low-dose stimulation (<534, 1476, and 2473 μg/L for 10-, 30-, and 100-nm Ag-NPs, respectively) and higher dose inhibition. | Zheng et al. [ |
| Fresh and aged Ag-NPs | Size: 74.2 ± 5.1 (aged NPs), 67.9 ± 1.0 nm (fresh NPs). | Sequencing batch reactors ( | Ag-NPs were added, 27 days after start-up, at a concentration of 1 mg Ag/L in influent (0.5 mg/L in the reactor) for over 2 months. | Microbial community analysis | Microbial analysis (16S gene-based sequencing): fresh Ag-NPs had the highest number of genes detected and richness. | Sheng et al. [ |
| Cu-NPs | Size: 10–30 nm; Purity: 99.9%. | Marin diatom | Algal cultures were supplied with NPs (0–80 μM) for 48–96 h. | Algal growth; photosynthetic pigment content | Algal growth: slightly stimulated by 48 h of 10 μM Cu-NPs and inhibited by the same dose for 96 h. Greater concentrations (20, 40, 80 μM) significantly inhibited algal growth in a time dependent manner. | Zhu et al. [ |
| Cu- and Se-carboxylated with citric acid nanoaquachelates | Size: ~100 nm. | Green algae | Algal cultures were supplied with NPs (0.67–40 μg/mL) for 6–24 days. | Algal growth: biomass production | Increased by 0.67–4 μg/mL of Cu-nanocarboxylates (~20% biomass increase); inhibited by 20 to 40 μg/mL after the 12th day of cultivation. | Mykhaylenko and Zolotareva, [ |
| MW-CNTs | Size: 6–9 nm large, 5 μm length; Purity: 95%. | Agar culture medium containing MW-CNTs (0–60 μg/mL) was used for seed growth (7 days) | Plant indices of growth and water absorption | Water content (shoots): increased at 10 μg/mL, decreased at higher concentrations. | Tiwari et al. [ | |
| PEG-coated and carbon-coated Ag-NPs | Size: 5 and 10 (PEG-Ag-NPs); 25 nm (carbon coated Ag-NPs). | Poplars ( | Plants were exposed to 0–100 μg/mL NPs. | Growth parameters | Evotranspiration (poplar): enhanced by 1 μg/mL carbon-Ag-NPs (42% vs. controls) and by 0.1 μg/mL PEG-Ag-NPs (43% vs. controls); decreased by 100 μg/mL carbon-Ag-NPs (87%). | Wang et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 10–30 nm. | Common bean ( | Ag-NPs (15 mL at 0–100 μg/mL) were daily supplied to plants for 12 days. | Plant growth parameters | Shoot and root length; fresh and dry weight; leaf area; chlorophyll and carbohydrate content: increased with concentrations up to 60 μg/mL, decreased by higher, 80 and 100 μg/mL. | Salama et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 35 ± 15 nm; Surface functionalization: PVP. | Vanilla shoots (2 cm long) | Shoots were exposed to 0–200 μg/mL NPs for 30 days of culture in a recipient for automated temporary immersion. | Shoot multiplication and length | Number of shoot per explant: 25 and 50 μg/mL NPs: 14.33 and 14.89 respectively; 200 μg/mL: 4.55. | Spinoso-Castillo et al. [ |
| PVP coated Ag-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 35 ± 15 nm. | Sugarcane shoots | Shoots were placed in a temporary immersion bioreactor in which NP solutions were added (0–250 μg/mL) for 30 days. | Shoot multiplication rate and length | The treatment with 50 and 100 mg/L Ag-NPs induced the greatest shoot number (increased by 35% and 28%, respectively) and length (increased by 52% and 48%, respectively). | Bello-Bello et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 10–20 nm. | Seedlings of wheat variety Narc-2009 ( | Pot soil was soaked with Ag-NPs (0–150 μg/mL) solution or distilled water in control treatment. | Seedling growth; yield attributes and nutrient use efficiency | Ag-NPs at 25 and 50 μg/mL significantly improved maximum leaf area (19.7 and 18.18 cm2, respectively, vs. 15 cm2 in controls); grain yield ( | Jhanzab et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 10–20 nm. | Seedlings of wheat variety Narc-2009 ( | Seedlings were applied Ag-NPs (0–150 μg/mL) through a blended Murashige and Skoog medium. | Germination, seedling growth, yield attributes | Germination (medium): Ag-NPs had no effect (25–75 μg/mL), and reduced germination (100–150 μg/mL) compared to controls. | Razzaq et al. [ |
| Metal nanoform colloidal solution | Metal NPs in solution (size in nm; dose in μg/mL): Ag (30–50; 150); Cu (100–150; 200); Fe (20–30; 300); Zn (30–50; 150); Mn (20–30; 150). | Soybean seeds and plants | Pre-sowing seed treatment with metal colloids at 120 or 240 μg/mL; pre-sowing (120 μg/mL) combined with vegetative treatment. | Oxidative stress; lipid peroxidation | Pre-sowing treatment with 120 μg/mL nanosolution increased (12%) lipid peroxidation, while treatment with 240 μg/mL and 120 μg/mL + vegetative treatment decreased the oxidative process (19% and 10%, respectively). | Taran et al. [ |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 8 nm. | Nematodes ( | Reproduction outcome: number of offspring | Short-term test: mean number of offspring (89 and 117, at the 1st and 2nd test, respectively) at 0.0625 μg/mL was higher compared to controls (75) (n.s.). Mean number of offspring at higher doses (2, 4 μg/mL) was significantly reduced compared to controls. | Tyne et al. [ | |
| CeO2-NPs | CeO2-NPs (1) Shape: spherical; Size: 2–5 nm; Surface functionalization: tri ammonium citrate layer; Uncoated CeO2- spherical NPs (2) Size: 2–5 nm; Uncoated CeO2-nano-plates (3) Size: 10–60 nm. | Microcosms containing microbial communities, diatoms and chironomid larvae. | Fresh NP suspensions (50 mL of 93.4 mg/L) were added 12 times over 4 weeks to obtain the final concentration of 1 mg/L. | Larval growth and teratogenicity | The teratogenicity induced by CeO2-NPs (1) (frequency and seriousness of deformities) was significantly less than that in the control conditions. | Bour et al. [ |
| ZnO-NPs | Size: 40–100 nm; Surface area: 10–25 m2/g. | Tadpoles were exposed to aqueous suspensions beginning in ovo through metamorphosis (0–2 μg/mL). | Developmental assessment | SVL: on days 10–20, 0.067 μg/mL had significantly longer SVL than controls. On days 10–46, 0.305, 0.513 and 0.799 μg/mL tadpoles were shorter than controls. | Nations et al. [ | |
| ZnO-NPs | Size: 40–100 nm; Surface area: 10–25 m2/g. | Nominal solutions of ZnO-NPs (0.1–31.6 μg/mL) were employed for a subacute 96 h exposure protocol for daily solution exchange. | Total body length | Increased by 0.1, 0.316, and 1 μg/mL ZnO; decreased by 10 and 31 μg/mL. | Nations et al. [ | |
| CuO-NPs | Size: 23–37 nm; Surface area: 25–40 m2/g. | Nominal solutions of CuO-NPs (0.01875–2.5 μg/mL) were employed for 14 and 47 days. | Total body length | All tadpoles in solutions containing less than 0.15 μg/mL CuO-NPs achieved significantly longer total body length than controls in chronic treatment. | Nations et al. [ | |
| Ag-NPs | Size: 5 nm. | Lessepsian-entry bivalve sea mussel | Animals were treated with 2–40 μg/L NPs for 8 days. | Respiration and heartbeat rate | Overall (8 days) respiration rate: 2 and 40 μg/L increased the rate, while 20 μg/L did not show differences compared to controls. | Saggese et al. [ |
| Pd-NPs | Shape: spherical; Size: 10 nm; Size distribution: 4–16 nm. | 20 female pathogen-free Wistar rats | Single intravenous injection (via the tail vein) of vehicle (control group) and 0.012, 0.12, 1.2 and 12 μg/kg Pd-NPs (exposed rats). | Production and release of different cytokines (IL-1α, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, GM-CSF, INF-γ and TNF-α) | Exposure to Pd-NPs was able to affect immune response since the mean serum concentrations of all cytokines decreased after the administration of 0.012 μg/kg Pd-NPs, while their levels exceeded the control values at higher doses of exposure (0.12, 1.2 and 12 μg/kg). | Iavicoli et al. [ |
Ag-NPs, silver nanoparticles; CeO2-NPs, cerium oxide nanoparticles; Cu-NPs, copper nanoparticles; Fe, iron; GM-CSF, Granulocyte macrophage- colony stimulating factor; IL, interleukin; INF-γ, interferon-γ; K, potassium; MIC, minimum inhibitory concentrations; Mn, manganese; MW-CNTs, multi-walled carbon nanotubes; N, nitrogen; P, phosphorus; Pd-NPs, Palladium Nanoparticles; PEG, polyethylene-glycol; PVP, Polyvinylpyrrolidone; RR, respiration rate; SVL, Snout vent length; QD, quantum dot; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; ZnO-NPs, zinc oxide nanoparticles.
Figure 2Examples of species-specific biphasic response observed in different bacteria. (A) The respirometry assays showed that NM-300 AgNPs were able to induce a hormetic response only in Gram-positive bacteria (A. agilis and S. koyangensis) (modified by Echavarri-Bravo et al. [18]). (B) The exposure of N. europaea to 35 nm AgNPs affected the transcriptional activity of nitrifying genes (amoA1, amoB2, amoC2, hao2 and sodB) showing a biphasic response. This effect was not evident in other bacteria (P. tutzeri and A. vinelandii) (modified by Yang et al. [19]). * Indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05).
Figure 3Examples of NP size-dependent biphasic response. (A,B) In E. coli cells, the exposure to Ag-NPs induced a hormetic response regardless of NP size and functionalization (modified by Xiu et al. [16]). (C) Biphasic response of cumulative evapotranspiration was observed in poplars (Populus deltoides × nigra) exposed to carbon- and PEG-coated Ag-NPs of 25 and 10 nm, respectively (modified by Wang et al. [26]). (D) PEG-coated Ag-NPs of 5 and 10 nm affected the root elongation of Arabidopsis thaliana showing a hormetic effect (modified by Wang et al. [26]). (E) Ag-NPs of different size (10 and 100 nm) showed a hormetic cell proliferation response in HepG2 cells (modified by Jiao et al. [13]). (F) Pretreatment of human A549 lung epithelial cells with low doses of Ag-NPs reduced the cytotoxic effect caused by acrolein and/or by exposure to higher doses of the same NPs (modified by Sthijns et al. [12]). * Indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05).
Figure 4Influence of NP chemical composition on the induction of biphasic response. (A) In E. coli cells, the exposure both to PVP- and PEG-coated Ag-NPs induced a hormetic response (modified by Xiu et al. [16]). (B) In Caco2 cells exposed for 36 h to different concentrations of Ag-NPs and ZnO-NPs, the hormetic response was induced only by Ag-NPs (modified by Kang et al. [14]). (C,D) Cu-NPs at higher concentrations inhibited P. tricornutum growth, while at lower concentrations slightly stimulated growth (modified by Zhou et al. [23]). In the same experimental model, increasing concentrations of CdSe/ZnS-QDs did not induced a hormetic response (modified by Morelli et al. [46]). (E,F) Cu-NPs and Se-NPs induced a different kind of biphasic response related to the grown of Chlorella vulgaris (modified by Mykhaylenko and Zolotareva, [24]). * Indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05).
Figure 5Influence of experimental conditions on the occurrence of hormesis. (A) The addiction of cysteine in culture media significantly affected the hormetic behavior of Ag-NPs (modified by Guo et al. [17]). (B) Duration of exposure might influence the induction of a biphasic response by Ag-NPs (modified by Razzaq et al. [31]). (C) The hormesis response induced by Ag-NPs in Caenorhabditis elegans is evident following a sub-acute period of exposure, while after 12 days it was no longer observable (modified by Tyne et al. [33]). * Indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05).
Figure 6Flow diagram of literature search.