| Literature DB >> 30323250 |
Chun-Chih Hu1, Gong-Her Wu2, Sheng-Feng Lai3, Muniesh Muthaiyan Shanmugam2, Y Hwu3, Oliver I Wagner4, Ta-Jen Yen5.
Abstract
We utilized size-tunable gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) to investigate the toxicogenomic responses of the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans. We demonstrated that the nematode C. elegans can uptake Au NPs coated with or without 11-mercaptoundecanoic acid (MUA), and Au NPs are detectable in worm intestines using X-ray microscopy and confocal optical microscopy. After Au NP exposure, C. elegans neurons grew shorter axons, which may have been related to the impeded worm locomotion behavior detected. Furthermore, we determined that MUA to Au ratios of 0.5, 1 and 3 reduced the worm population by more than 50% within 72 hours. In addition, these MUA to Au ratios reduced the worm body size, thrashing frequency (worm mobility) and brood size. MTT assays were employed to analyze the viability of cultured C. elegans primary neurons exposed to MUA-Au NPs. Increasing the MUA to Au ratios increasingly reduced neuronal survival. To understand how developmental changes (after MUA-Au NP treatment) are related to changes in gene expression, we employed DNA microarray assays and identified changes in gene expression (e.g., clec-174 (involved in cellular defense), cut-3 and fil-1 (both involved in body morphogenesis), dpy-14 (expressed in embryonic neurons), and mtl-1 (functions in metal detoxification and homeostasis)).Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30323250 PMCID: PMC6189128 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-33585-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1TEM micrographs of Au NPs synthesized in the absence of MUA and in the presence of increasing MUA concentrations and the corresponding size histograms (n > 500). Large, nonspherical NP results are shown with no MUA present (a). With increasing MUA to Au ratios of 1:2 (b), 1:1 (c), and 3:1 (d), the NP dimensions and standard deviations decreased. Inset: size distribution of Au NPs.
Characteristics of the Au NPs used as determined by TEM and zeta potential.
| Sample | Diameter (nm ± STD) | Number of particles analyzed | Zeta potential at pH 6.5 (mV) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bare Au | 6.45 ± 1.58 | >500 | −49.2 |
| MUA/Au = 0.5 | 1.83 ± 1.21 | >500 | −65 |
| MUA/Au = 1 | 1.26 ± 0.25 | >500 | −56.6 |
| MUA/Au = 3 | 0.80 ± 0.12 | >500 | −61.9 |
Figure 2(a) XRD patterns of Au NP colloidal solutions obtained with and without MUA. The two peaks corresponded to 111 and 200 metallic gold planes and were visibly narrower when MUA was absent from the precursor solution, indicating that larger particles were formed without MUA than with MUA. (b) Zeta potential measurements of Au NP colloidal solutions obtained with and without MUA. High zeta potential (either positive or negative, >10–15 mV) led to monodispersity.
Figure 3High-resolution X-ray micrographs of bare Au and MUA-Au NPs in the C. elegans intestine. (a) 2D high-resolution X-ray micrographs in the absence of Au NPs. (b) 2D high-resolution X-ray micrographs of bare Au NPs. (c) 2D high-resolution X-ray micrographs with an increasing MUA: Au ratio of 1:2. (d) 2D high-resolution X-ray micrographs with an increasing MUA: Au ratio of 1:1. (e) 2D high-resolution X-ray micrographs with an increasing MUA: Au ratio of 3:1. (f) 3D reconstruction of the micrographs in (b). After incubating worms with bare Au NPs for 12 hours, aggregation was found in the worm intestines, demonstrating that bare Au NPs can be taken up by C. elegans. Scale bars: 100 µm.
Figure 4Effect of Au NPs with and without MUA on (a) worm population, (b) worm body length, (c) worm locomotion (worm thrashing assay) and (d) brood size. T-test: *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. Error bars: ± SD.
Figure 5(a,b) Images from primary neuronal cells in culture (expressing an mRFP-tagged axonal marker) reveal adverse effects on axonal growth upon exposure to Au NPs. (c) Cellular viability of neurons exposed to Au NPs indicated that small Au NPs reduced neuronal cell viability. T-test: *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01. Error bars: ± SD.
Figure 6DNA microarray results from worms exposed to bare Au NPs. (a) Examples of genes upregulated 3–6-fold. (b) Examples of genes downregulated 6–13-fold. DNA microarray results from worms exposed to MUA-Au NPs with MUA/Au NPs = 0.5. (c) Examples of genes upregulated 6-16-fold. (d) Examples of genes downregulated 8-27-fold. DNA microarray results from worms exposed to MUA-Au NPs with MUA/Au NPs = 3. (e) Examples of genes upregulated 3-5-fold. (f) Examples of genes downregulated 6-14-fold. For details on the cellular functions of these genes, refer to Tables 2–4.
Descriptions of the cellular functions of genes after exposure to bare Au NPs.
| Gene expression after bare Au NP exposure | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Y65B4BR.1 | Y65B4BR.1 is an ortholog of human PLB1 (phospholipase B1); Y65B4BR.1 is involved in cellular defense response; Y65B4BR.1 is predicted to have hydrolase activity, acting on ester bonds, based on protein domain information. |
| fil-1 | fil-1 is involved in lipid catabolic processes and lipid storage; fil-1 exhibits lipase activity; fil-1 is expressed in the intestine. |
| pud-3 | pud-3 is expressed in the pm3, hyp7 syncytium, head, intestine, and rectal gland cells. |
| Y75B12B.8 | Microarray studies indicate that Y75B12B.8 is regulated by clk-1, sir-2.1, and mir-243; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that Y75B12B.8 is regulated by mianserin, quercetin, and single-walled carbon nanotubes. |
| Y53F4B.45 | Microarray studies indicate that Y53F4B.45 is regulated by Cry5B, hydrolyzable tannins, humic substances, R24, selenium, sirolimus, and allantoin; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that Y53F4B.45 is enriched in germ line cells, muscle cells and neurons, including DA neurons. |
|
| |
| pmp-5 | pmp-5 is an ortholog of human ABCD4 (ATP-binding cassette subfamily D member 4); pmp-5 is predicted to have ATP-binding activity and ATPase activity, coupled to the transmembrane movement of substances, based on protein domain information; pmp-5 is expressed in the hypodermis and intestine. |
| F44A6.5 | F44A6.5 encodes a novel protein conserved among nematodes. |
| acdh-1 | acdh-1 encodes a short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; ACDH-1 is predicted to be a mitochondrial enzyme that catalyzes the first step of fatty acid beta-oxidation and thus plays a key role in energy production; steady-state acdh-1 mRNA levels are controlled by the MDT-15 mediator complex subunit; in addition, gene expression studies indicate that acdh-1 expression is upregulated in daf-2 mutant animals but downregulated in fasted animals; loss of acdh-1 activity via RNAi can shorten the lifespan. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
Information taken from Wormbase (Wormbase.org). For additional details and citations, please refer to Wormbase.
Descriptions of the cellular functions of genes after exposure to MUA/Au NPs = 3.
| Gene expression after exposure to MUA/Au NPs = 3 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Y65B4BR.1 | Y65B4BR.1 is an ortholog of human PLB1 (phospholipase B1); Y65B4BR.1 is involved in cellular defense response; Y65B4BR.1 is predicted to have hydrolase activity, acting on ester bonds, based on protein domain information. |
| fil-1 | fil-1 is involved in lipid catabolic processes and lipid storage; fil-1 exhibits lipase activity; fil-1 is expressed in the intestine. |
| clec-174 | clec-174 is involved in cellular defense response. |
| F49C12.7 | RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that F49C12.7 is regulated by ethanol, 1-methylnicotinamide, methylmercuric chloride, D-glucose, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, humic substances, R24, colistin, dafa #1, and sirolimus; proteomic, tiling array, RNA sequencing, and microarray studies indicate that F49C12.7 is enriched in the germ line, coelomocytes, the intestine and neurons. |
| cysl-2 | cysl-2 encodes a homolog of sulfhydrylases/cysteine synthases. |
|
| |
| mtl-1 | mtl-1 encodes one of two |
| ZK593.3 | ZK593.3 is involved in lipid storage. |
| F44A6.5 | F44A6.5 encodes a novel protein conserved among nematodes. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, Diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
Information taken from Wormbase (Wormbase.org). For additional details and citations, please refer to Wormbase.
Descriptions of the cellular functions of genes after exposure to MUA/Au NPs = 0.5.
| Gene expression after exposure to MUA/Au NP = 0.5 | |
|---|---|
|
| |
| T05H10.3 | T05H10.3 is expressed in the hypodermis. |
| cut-3 | cut-3 is involved in body morphogenesis. |
| dpy-14 | dpy-14 encodes a type III (alpha 1) collagen that is required for embryonic, larval, and vulval development, proper amphid morphology, and regulation of body shape and size; a dpy-14 promoter-GFP fusion construct is reportedly expressed in embryonic neurons. |
| Y64H9A.2 | RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that Y64H9A.2 is regulated by methylmercury hydroxide, 1-methylnicotinamide, manganese chloride, D-glucose, fluoranthene, diazinon, chlorpyrifos, quercetin, paraquat, colistin, dafa #1, and sirolimus; microarray and tiling array studies indicate that Y64H9A.2 is enriched in germline precursor cells, the hypodermis and PVD and OLL neurons. |
| fil-1 | fil-1 is involved in lipid catabolic processes and lipid storage; fil-1 exhibits lipase activity; fil-1 is expressed in the intestine. |
|
| |
| pmp-5 | pmp-5 is an ortholog of human ABCD4 (ATP-binding cassette subfamily D member 4); pmp-5 is predicted to have ATP-binding activity and ATPase activity, coupled to the transmembrane movement of substances, based on protein domain information; pmp-5 is expressed in the hypodermis and intestine. |
| F44A6.5 | F44A6.5 encodes a novel protein conserved among nematodes. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
| T05E12.6 | T05E12.6 is an ortholog of human EPHX1 (epoxide hydrolase 1); microarray and RNA sequencing studies indicate that T05E12.6 is regulated by heme, diallyl trisulfide, tunicamycin, D-glucopyranose, D-glucose, deoxyglucose, atrazine, fluoranthene, Cry5B, chlorpyrifos, diazinon, quercetin, humic substances, colistin, adsorbable organic bromine compounds, sirolimus, and Ag nanoparticles; RNA sequencing and microarray studies indicate that T05E12.6 is enriched in germ line cells, intestine, and I5, DA, SAB, and retrovesicular ganglia. |
| acdh-1 | acdh-1 encodes a short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase; ACDH-1 is predicted to be a mitochondrial enzyme that catalyzes the first step of fatty acid beta-oxidation and thus plays a key role in energy production; steady-state acdh-1 mRNA levels are controlled by the MDT-15 mediator complex subunit; in addition, gene expression studies indicate that acdh-1 expression is upregulated in daf-2 mutant animals but downregulated in fasted animals; loss of acdh-1 activity via RNAi can shorten the lifespan. |
Information taken from Wormbase (Wormbase.org). For additional details and citations, please refer to Wormbase.