| Literature DB >> 30257465 |
Jericó Jabín Bello-Bello1, José Luis Spinoso-Castillo2, Samantha Arano-Avalos3, Eduardo Martínez-Estrada4, María Evarista Arellano-García5, Alexey Pestryakov6, Yanis Toledano-Magaña7, Juan Carlos García-Ramos8, Nina Bogdanchikova9.
Abstract
Worldwide demands of Vanilla planifolia lead to finding new options to produce large-scale and contaminant-free crops. Particularly, the Mexican Government has classified Vanilla planifolia at risk and it subject to protection programs since wild species are in danger of extinction and no more than 30 clones have been found. Nanotechnology could help to solve both demands and genetic variability, but toxicological concerns must be solved. In this work, we present the first study of the cytotoxic and genotoxic effects promoted by AgNPs in Vanilla planifolia plantlets after a very long exposure time of six weeks. Our results show that Vanilla planifolia plantlets growth with doses of 25 and 50 mg/L is favored with a small decrease in the mitotic index. A dose-dependency in the frequency of cells with chromosomal aberrations and micronuclei was found. However, genotoxic effects could be considered as minimum due to with the highest concentration employed (200 mg/L), the total percentage of chromatic aberrations is lower than 5% with only three micronuclei in 3000 cells, despite the long-time exposure to AgNP. Therefore, 25 and 50 mg/L (1.5 and 3 mg/L of metallic silver) were identified as safe concentrations for Vanilla planifolia growth on in vitro conditions. Exposure of plantlets to AgNPs increase the polymorphism registered by inter-simple sequence repeat method (ISSR), which could be useful to promote the genetic variability of this species.Entities:
Keywords: Vanilla planifolia; cytotoxicity; genotoxicity; growth promotion; polymorphism induction; safe nanoparticles; silver nanoparticles
Year: 2018 PMID: 30257465 PMCID: PMC6215222 DOI: 10.3390/nano8100754
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
ISSR primers used for detecting somaclonal variation in V. planifolia.
| Primer | Sequence (5′–3′) | °Tm (°C) 2 | No. of Bands | Range (bp) 3 | Polymorphism (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UBC 809 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGG | 45 | 10 | 300–2000 | 30 |
| T 06 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGGT | 50 | 9 | 300–1550 | 66.66 |
| UBC 840 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAYT 1 | 50 | 8 | 200–1400 | 25 |
| UBC 836 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGYA 1 | 50 | 7 | 200–1550 | 42.86 |
| UBC 812 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAA | 50 | 7 | 200–1400 | 28.57 |
| UBC 825 | ACACACACACACACACT | 51 | 6 | 500–3000 | 83.33 |
| UBC 808 | AGAGAGAGAGAGAGAGC | 52 | 10 | 200–750 | 60 |
| T 05 | CGTTGTGTGTGTGTGTGT | 54 | 8 | 300–2000 | 25 |
| C 07 | GAGAGAGAGAGAGAGAC | 56 | 7 | 300–1400 | 71.43 |
1 Y″: C or T residues. 2 °Tm: annealing temperature. 3 bp: base pair.
Physicochemical characteristics of silver nanoparticles commercial batch used in this work.
| Properties | Mean |
|---|---|
| Metallic silver content | 12 mg/L |
| Form Factor (Spheroid) | 0.82 |
| Roundness | 0.88 |
| Size interval of metallic silver particles by TEM (nm) | 1–80 |
| Average diameter by TEM (nm) | 38 ± 15 |
| Zeta potential (mV) | −15 |
| Surface plasmon resonance (nm) | 420 |
Figure 1TEM image of AgNPs batch used in this work using different magnifications. (a) bar = 100 nm, and (b) bar = 50 nm.
Figure 2Effect of AgNPs on in vitro growth of V. planifolia after six weeks of culture. (i) Shoot length, (ii) number of leaves, (iii) root length, and (iv) number of roots. Different letters denote statistically significant differences according to Tukey’s test (p ≤ 0.05).
Figure 3Effect of AgNPs on in vitro elongation and rooting of V. planifolia after six weeks of in vitro culture. From left to right 0, 25, 50, 100, and 200 mg/L of AgNPs (0, 1.5, 3, 6, and 12 mg/L of metallic silver).
Cytotoxic and Genotoxic effect of AgNPs on V. planifolia growth in vitro for six weeks.
| AgNPs (mg L−1) 1 | Cells in Division | Mitotic Index (%) | Aberration (%) 2 | Total Aberration (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CB | CF | BC | MN | ||||
| 0 | 2582 ± 92 * | 88.21 ± 0.48 * | 0.03 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.03 ± 0.00 * |
| 25 (1.5) | 2348 ± 75 * | 83.18 ± 1.16 * | 0.10 | 0.08 | 0 | 0 | 0.18 ± 0.06 * |
| 50 (3.0) | 2338 ± 87 * | 82.15 ± 2.40 * | 0.30 | 0.50 | 0.17 | 0 | 0.97 ± 0.03 ** |
| 100 (6.0) | 1786 ± 99 ** | 60.35 ± 0.90 ** | 1.5 | 1.0 | 0.16 | 1.5 | 4.16 ± 0.17 *** |
| 200 (12.0) | 1018 ± 72 *** | 33.53 ± 1.91 *** | 1.5 | 1.4 | 1.0 | 3.0 | 6.90 ± 0.22 **** |
1 Values in brackets correspond to the metallic silver content in AgNPs formulation. 2 The total number of cells counted was 3000. CB: Cells with bridges; CF: Chromosomal fragments; BC: Binucleated cells; MN: Micronuclei. Average values ± standard error within a column followed by the same number of asterisks are not significantly different according to Tukey’s test at p ≤ 0.05.
Figure 4Chromosomal aberration and nuclear observed in root tips cells of V. planifolia at 200 mg L−1 of AgNPs after six weeks of in vitro culture. (a) Cell with micronucleus; (b) binucleated cell, (c) cell in anaphase with a chromosomal fragment, (d) cell in telophase with laggard, and (e) cell in anaphase with a bridge. Arrows indicate the produced damage in each case. Bar = 10 µm.
DNA damage and/or genotoxic effects observed in diverse plants exposed to several exposure times and concentrations of different AgNPs formulations.
| Plant | AgNPs Source and Physicochemical Properties | Active Component Concentration (Metallic Silver Content) | Exposure Time and (AgNPs) Used | DNA Damage or Genotoxic Effect | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Commercial Vector-Vita PVP-AgNPs Size: 35 ± 15 nm, coating agent: PVP; ζ potential: −15 mV; hydrodynamic diameter: 70 nm | Metallic silver content quantified by ICP-OES | 42 days | A dose-dependent increase in the frequency of cells with CA. 1.5 and 3 MN were observed in 3000 counted cells for the concentrations 100 and 200 mg/L, respectively | This work |
|
| Commercial Sigma-Aldrich size: <100 nm, purity: 99.5% trace metal basis, coating agent: NR | NR | 4 h | CA and cell disintegration. | [ |
|
| Commercial Ocean Nanotech LLC, size: 60 nm; purity: 99.5% trace metal basis, coating agent: NR | NR | 4 h of exposure and 24 h of recovery | Dose-dependence increase in the frequency of cells with CA and MN. MN frequency with 100 mg/L of AgNPs is triplicated compared with control (control 5.86 ± 0.66; AgNPs 100 mg/L: 18.4 ± 0.75). | [ |
|
| Commercial Sigma-Aldrich Size: <100 nm, purity: 99.5% trace metal basis, coating agent: NR | NR | 24 h | No damage was observed in nuclei isolated from shoots. Nuclei isolated from roots exposed to 50 and 75 µg/mL shown DNA damage determined by comet assay. Dose-dependence for DNA damage. | [ |
| Synthesis, spherical, size: ~20 nm; coating agent: NR | NR | Soaked by 24 h in AgNPs solution and germinated by a period of 72 and 120 h, respectively. | Time-dependent increase in the CA and MN frequency | [ | |
| Synthesis, spherical, size: ~20 nm; coating agent: NR | NR | Soaked by 24 h in AgNPs solution and germinated by a period of 72 and 120 h, respectively. | Time-dependent increase in the CA and MN frequency | [ | |
|
| Synthesis; size: 10–15 nm, coating agent: NR | NR | 5 and 10 days | CA observed with 0.9 mM after exposure of 5 days. Longer exposure (10 days) or higher concentrations enhance the magnitude of CA. | [ |
| Green synthesis: Rhodophyta extraction + AgNO3 | NR | 8, 16, and 24 h | Both AgNPs showed concentration- and time-dependent increase in the frequency of cells with CA and MN. | [ | |
| Commercial nanoComposix | NR | Soaked by 4 h in 32 mL of 1 and 10 mg/L PVP-AgNPs solution, respectively. | No differences between the genetic polymorphism of roots treated with AgNPs and control samples by AFLP. | [ | |
|
| Synthesis | Metallic silver content quantified by ICP-MS for each sample | 72 h | No DNA damage was observed with any of the AgNPs-citrate concentrations employed. Increase in tail DNA was recorded after exposure to AgNPs-PVP at 100 μM concentration. AgNPs-CTAB produces DNA damage only with 50 μM concentration. | [ |
| NR | NR | 16 days | More than 30 mg/L of AgNPs decreases ACS | [ | |
| Commercial Sigma-Aldrich (Catalog number 576832) | NR | 14 days | GTS decreases as AgNPs concentration increases. | [ | |
| Synthesis. All have shown spherical shape | NR | Exposure for 3 h and recovery time of 4, 8, 12, and 24 h | Authors report that all AgNPs induce genotoxic effects from the concentration of 1 mg/L, with exception of AgNPsIV which induced genotoxicity only at the higher concentration of 40 mg/L. | [ |
NR: no reported; ICP-EOS: inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry; ICP-MS: inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry; PVP: poly(vinylpyrrolidone); PVPP: polyvinyl polypyrrolidone; TSC: trisodium citrate; CTAB: Cetyl trimethylammonium bromide; PEG: poly(ethylene glycol); MN: micronuclei; CA: chromosomic aberrations which include chromatin bridges, stickiness, disturbed metaphase, multiple chromosomal breaks. AFLP: Amplified fragment length polymorphism; ISSR: Inter-Simple Sequence Repeat; ACS: 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase; GTS: Genome template stability.
Figure 5Electrophoresis pattern of ISSR banding profiles of five plants (1–5) of V. planifolia exposed to AgNPs for six weeks on in vitro culture. The amplification for UBC 825 primer corresponding to (a–e) 0, 25, 50, 100, and 200 mg/L of AgNPs, respectively. M = molecular mass marker 1 kbp plus DNA ladder; bp = base pairs.