| Literature DB >> 29656436 |
Srinath Patibandla1, Yinan Zhang2,3, Ali Mohammad Tohari1,4, Peng Gu2, James Reilly1, Yu Chen2, Xinhua Shu1.
Abstract
The use of nanoparticles - particles that range in size from 1 to 100 nm - has become increasingly prevalent in recent years, bringing with it a variety of potential toxic effects. Zebrafish embryos were exposed during the 3 day postfertilization period to gold nanospheres (GNSs), gold nanorods (GNRs), GNRs coated with polystyrene sulphate (PSS-GNRs) and GNRs coated with both PSS and polyallamine hydrochloride (PAH-PSS-GNRs). All nanorods were stabilized with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide. GNSs were the least toxic of the nanoparticles studied, with exposure resulting in no significant changes in mortality, hatching or heart rate. Exposure to GNRs and PSS-GNRs resulted in significant increases in mortality and significant decreases in hatching and heart rate. Treatment with GNRs caused significant changes in the expression of a variety of oxidative stress genes. The toxic effects of GNRs were ameliorated by coating them with PSS and, to a more marked extent, with a double coating of PSS and polyallamine hydrochloride.Entities:
Keywords: Nanoparticles; nanorods; nanospheres; toxicity; zebrafish
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29656436 DOI: 10.1002/jat.3628
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Toxicol ISSN: 0260-437X Impact factor: 3.446