| Literature DB >> 30122919 |
Menglei Wang1, Xuan Lai2, Longquan Shao2, Li Li1.
Abstract
Nanotechnology is an interdisciplinary science that has developed rapidly in recent years. Metallic nanoparticles (NPs) are increasingly utilized in dermatology and cosmetology, because of their unique properties. However, skin exposure to NPs raises concerns regarding their transdermal toxicity. The tight junctions of epithelial cells form the skin barrier, which protects the host against external substances. Recent studies have found that NPs can pass through the skin barrier into deeper layers, indicating that skin exposure is a means for NPs to enter the body. The distribution and interaction of NPs with skin cells may cause toxic side effects. In this review, possible penetration pathways and related toxicity mechanisms are discussed. The limitations of current experimental methods on the penetration and toxic effects of metallic NPs are also described. This review contributes to a better understanding of the risks of topically applied metallic NPs and provides a foundation for future studies.Entities:
Keywords: metallic nanoparticles; toxicity; transdermal penetration
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30122919 PMCID: PMC6078075 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S170745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Skin absorption of metallic NPs
| Species | Study duration | Analysis method | Observation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZnO NPs | Human | 2, 4 hours | ZnO NPs and NAD(P)H signals quantified by TCSPC-FLIM | No ZnO-NP penetration detected in human skin after 2 and 4 hours’ treatment; free NAD(P)H signal significantly increased in tape-stripped viable epidermis treated for 4 hours with ZnO-NP compared to vehicle control | |
| TiO2 NPs | Hairless rat | 2, 4, and 8 weeks | Histopathological, TEM, EDS | Particles located only in stratum corneum layer of epidermis and follicular epithelium histopathologically; TEM and EDS analysis failed to show TiO2 NPs in viable skin areas | |
| TiO2 NPs | Porcine back skin | 8, 24, 48 hours | PIXE, RBS, STIM, SEI | TiO2 NPs penetrated SC into SG but not SS within 8 hours; NPs not detected in hair follicles | |
| TiO2 NPs and ZnO NPs | Human | 2, 48 hours | Nuclear microscopy, PIXE | NPs observed only in the 70%–90% depth of SC and openings of follicles | |
| AuNPs | Human | 2 hours | Multiphoton microscopy | AuNPs detected up to 14 µm deep in human skin, whereas a wide range of detectable depths (20–100 µm) observed in reconstructed skin | |
| AgNPs | Porcine ear skin | 24 hours | TPT-FLIM, CRM, SERS | TPT-FLIM, CRM, SERS showed depths of 12–14, 11.1±2.1, and 15.6±8.3 µm, respectively | |
| AgNPs | Human | 4–6 days | Histopathological, SEM, XRD | A limited number of NPs noted histopathologically; metallic particles seen within the dermis by SEM; XRD confirmed these were AgNPs | |
| AuNPs | Human | 0.5, 2, 6, and 24 hours | Franz method, multiphoton microscopy | AuNPs penetrated SC into deeper skin layers after 24 hours’ skin exposure | |
| CoNPs | Human intact and abraded skin | 2, 4, 8, 16, and 24 hours | Franz method, ICP-AES | NPs able to penetrate human skin in an in vitro cell-diffusion system; cobalt concentration in damaged skin significantly greater than in intact skin | |
| NiNPs | Human intact and needle-abraded human skin | 4, 8, 16, and 24 hours | Franz method, ICP-AES | NiNPs caused increase in nickel content into skin and significant permeation flux through skin in vitro, higher when damaged-skin protocol used |
Abbreviations: TCSPC, time-correlated single-photon counting; FLIM, fluorescence-lifetime imaging microscopy; TEM, transmission electron microscopy; EDS, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy; SG, stratum granulosum; SS, stratum spinosum; PIXE, particle-induced X-ray emission; RBS, Rutherford back-scattering; STIM, scanning transmission ion microscopy; SEI, secondary electron imaging; TPT, two-photon tomography; CRM, confocal Raman microscopy; SERS, surface-enhanced Raman scattering; XRD, X-ray diffusion; ICP-AES, inductively coupled plasma–atomic-emission spectroscopy; NPs, nanoparticles.
Figure 1Skin penetration of metal NPs.
Notes: Three main possible skin-penetration pathways are illustrated: the intracellular pathway, intercellular pathway, and follicular pathway. Metal NPs may penetrate the stratum corneum in healthy skin. In damaged skin, more NPs may penetrate the epidermis and dermis. They may move to the lymph modes and be engulfed by macrophages. During penetration, metal NPs release metal ions, which induce metal ion-specific CD4+ T-cell and IL17-mediated immunoreactions.
Abbreviation: NPs, nanoparticles.
Risk evaluation of metal NPs in skin cells
| Size (nm) | Concentration | Cellular model/organism | Impact | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AgNPs | 20 | 1, 10 ng/mL | Murine fibroblasts | No significant cytotoxicity on cell viability | |
| AuNPs | 15 | 25, 500 µg/mL | Human dermal fibroblasts | No morphological changes observed | |
| TiO2 NPs | 10–60 | 5% | Hairless mouse skin | Changed production of MDA and reduced HYP expression in skin samples | |
| SiNPs | 20 | 500, 1,000, 2,000 mg/kg | Mouse skin | No systemic toxicity | |
| AgNPs | 75–90 | 1–100 µg/mL | HaCaT keratinocytes | Reduced cell viability; toxicity influenced by NP shape and concentration | |
| TiO2 NPs | 10±4 | 1% | Human dermal fibroblasts | Initiated oxidative stress | |
| TiO2 NPs | 50 | 20, 40, 80, 160 µg/mL | Mouse fibroblasts | Initiated collagen deformation, inflammation, and protein structural deformations | |
| TiO2 NPs, ZnO NPs | 21.5±0.6, 18.2±0.4 | 25% | Hairless mouse skin | No histological changes seen in skin; elevated Ti detected in mouse livers | |
| AgNPs | 15, 30, 55 | 20, 30, 40, 50 µg/mL | Human neonatal skin stromal cells | Caused apoptosis or necrosis | |
| AgNPs | 10, 30, 60 | 1.0 mg/mL | HaCaT keratinocytes | Impact on cell viability and metabolism; downregulated glycolysis and disrupted energy production common to AgNPs; ROS mediated impact on metabolic pathways, such as GSH synthesis, glutaminolysis, and the Krebs cycle | |
| AgNPs | 4.7, 42 | 0.1–1.6 µg/mL for 4.7 nm; 0.1–6.7 µg/mL for 42 nm | Human dermal fibroblasts | Induced DNA-strand breaks in dose- and size-dependent manner | |
| SiO2 NPs | 15 | 2.5, 5, 10 µg/mL | HaCaT keratinocytes | Decreased DNMT1, DNMT3A, and MBD2 levels at mRNA and protein levels, implying global epigenomic response | |
| ZnO NPs | 15.38±1.47 | 10 µg/mL | Mouse epidermal skin | Led to cell death through autophagic vacuole accumulation and mitochondrial damage via ROS induction | |
| Fe3O4 NPs | 25 | 25, 50, 100 µg/mL | Human skin epithelial A431 cells | Depleted glutathione and induced ROS and lipid peroxidation; significantly upregulated caspase 3 expression | |
| ZnO NPs | 30 | 1 mg/day applied on murine skin | Murine facial hair follicle stem cells | Caused obvious DNA damage and induced apoptosis; perturbed genes associated with cell communication and differentiation | |
| PtNPs | 4.8±11.7 | 25, 50, 100, 200, 400 µg/mL | Human foreskin fibroblasts | Inhibited DNA replication and affected secondary structure of DNA; genotoxic stress activated p53 and subsequently induced activation of p21, leading to proliferating cell nuclear antigen-mediated growth arrest in S phase and apoptosis | |
| TiO2 NPs | 20–30 | 0–1,000 µg/mL | Human fibroblast skin cells | Promoted cytotoxicity and oxidative damage; fatty-acid composites could reduce toxicity | |
| AgNPs and AuNPs | 0.1, 1, and 10 µg/mL | Human fibroblast skin cells | Decreased collagen, laminin production, and percentage of cells expressing collagen receptor; may influence fibroblast function by negatively modulating ECM deposition and altering ECM-receptor expression, cytoskeletal reorganization, and cell migration |
Abbreviations: NPs, nanoparticles; ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2Possible toxic mechanisms of metal NPs in HaCaT cells.
Notes: Metal NPs induce ROS explosion intracellularly, and the accumulation of NPs might result in the following effects: cell-cycle arrest, which is associated with DNA damage and chromatin structure remodeling caused by oxidative stress (G2/M cell-cycle arrest prevents DNA-damaged cells from entering mitosis to repair DNA and induce apoptosis); expression of epigenetic related genes, resulting in modifications of chromatin structure and alterations in gene expression; and mitochondrial damage and alteration of apoptosis and autophagy-related genes, which lead to autophagy and mitochondrial apoptosis.
Abbreviations: NPs, nanoparticles; ROS, reactive oxygen species.