| Literature DB >> 32443602 |
Neethu Ninan1,2, Nirmal Goswami1,3, Krasimir Vasilev1,2.
Abstract
Over the last decades there has been a tremendous volume of research efforts focused on engineering silver-based (nano)materials. The interest in silver has been mostly driven by the element capacity to kill pathogenic bacteria. In this context, the main area of application has been medical devices that are at significant risk of becoming colonized by bacteria and subsequently infected. However, silver nanomaterials have been incorporated in a number of other commercial products which may or may not benefit from antibacterial protection. The rapid expansion of such products raises important questions about a possible adverse influence on human health. This review focuses on examining currently available literature and summarizing the current state of knowledge of the impact of silver (nano)materials on the immune system. The review also looks at various surface modification strategies used to generate silver-based nanomaterials and the immunomodulatory potential of these materials. It also highlights the immune response triggered by various silver-coated implantable devices and provides guidance and perspective towards engineering silver nanomaterials for modulating immunological consequences.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammatory; immune cells; implants; pro-inflammatory; silver nanomaterials
Year: 2020 PMID: 32443602 PMCID: PMC7712063 DOI: 10.3390/nano10050967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.719
Figure 1Schematic diagram showing different types of immune cells of the innate and adaptive immunity that may interact with silver nanomaterials. Reproduced from [48], with permission from Elsevier, 2017.
Figure 2Schematic diagram showing the uptake mechanisms of silver nanomaterials by immune cells. Reproduced from [50], with permission from The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2015.
Figure 3Possible signaling pathways activated by silver nanomaterials to release pro-inflammatory cytokines.
In vitro evaluation of the immune response of silver nanomaterials.
| Type of Ag | Size | Reagents Used | Type of Immune Cells | Cytokines Expression | In vitro Inflammatory Assays | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| <20 nm | AgNO3, Quercetin, Polyoxyethylene Glycerol trioleate, and Tween 20 | Caco-2 cells | Decreased IL-8 expression | qRT-PCR, ELISA, total protein content, Nitrate/Nitrite Colorimetric Assay | [ |
|
| 10 µm | AgNO3, ethylene glycol, poly (vinylpyrrolidone) | Human monocyte-derived macrophages | Up taken by macrophages and transformed to silver chloride | High angle annular dark field scanning electron microscopy, Confocal analysis | [ |
|
| 1.5 nm | NaBH4, AgNO3 | RAW264.7 cells | Release TNF-α, IL-6 | ELISA | [ |
|
| 14 nm | NaBH4, AgNO3, | RAW264.7 and J774.1 | Reduced TNF-α expression | ELISA | [ |
|
| 10–50 nm | AgNO3, Extracts of | Hacat cells | Increased IL-1α and decreased IL-1α, IL-6 | ELISA | [ |
|
| 20–80 nm | AgNO3, Extracts of | Hacat cells | Reduced IL-1α production | ELISA | [ |
|
| 10 nm | Dendrimer, NaBH4, AgNO3, Sodium citrate | RAW264.7 and J774.1 | Decreased TNF-α, IL-6 | ELISA | [ |
|
| 23.52–60.83 nm | AgNO3, Ethanolic petal extract of | Rat peritoneal macrophages | Attenuate production of NO and superoxide | Nitrate/Nitrite Colorimetric Assay, Estimate superoxide anion generation | [ |
|
| 10.29–45.57 nm | AgNO3, Aqueous extracts of | Rat peritoneal macrophages | Attenuate production of IL-1α, NO and superoxide | ELISA, Immunoblotting, Nitrate/Nitrite Colorimetric Assay, Estimate superoxide anion generation | [ |
|
| 4 nm | Chloroform, NaBH4, AgNO3, POPS | Bone marrow-derived macrophage cells | Decrease in IL-6 and IL-1β, no effect in TNF-α | ELISA | [ |
In vivo assessment of the immune response of silver nanomaterials.
| Nature of Ag | Size | Reducing Agent Used | Animal Strain | Model | Outcome | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 9.3 ± 3.2 nm | NaBH4, AgNO3, | Balb/c mice | Postoperative adhesion model | Decrease inflammation in peritoneal adhesion without toxic effects | [ |
|
| 1.5 µm and 10 µm | AgNO3, ethylene glycol, polyvinyl pyrrolidone | Sprague Dawley rats | Intratracheal instillation, Lung model | Completely internalized by lung macrophages with toxic effects | [ |
|
| 7–10 nm | AgNO3, Leaf extracts of Terminalia species | Wistar albino rats | Hind paw oedema model | Inhibition of oedema by 95% | [ |
|
| 10–50 nm | AgNO3, Extracts of | Wistar rats | Carrageenan-induced inflammation models | Decreased inflammation | [ |
|
| 14 ± 9.8 nm | NaBH4, AgNO3, Sodium citrate | Male Balb/c mice | Thermal injury animal models | Silver can modulate cytokine expression | [ |
|
| 10 nm (5–15 nm) | Dendrimer, NaBH4, AgNO3, Sodium citrate | C57BL/6 N mice | Excisional and burn wound models | Enhanced anti-inflammatory efficacy | [ |
|
| 20–80 nm | AgNO3, Extracts of | Male Wistar rats, | Carrageenan-induced inflammation models | AgNPs enhanced inflammation edema rate | [ |
|
| 12–22 nm | Starch, NaOH, AgNO3, Absolute ethanol | Male and female rats | Grade II burn wound models | Reduce rat paw oedema | [ |
|
| 10–15 nm | AgNO3, polyethene | Domestic White/Landrace swine | Porcine contact dermatitis model | Treated normal pigs have near-normal skin after 24 h | [ |
|
| 850–1400 µm and 5 µm | Borosilicate glass beads | Male Balb/c mice | Models mimicking Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis | Attenuated inflammation in colitis and Crohn’s disease models | [ |
|
| 7 ± 3 nm | AgNO3, Diaminopyridiinyl Heparin, Glucose, | Male rats | Carrageenan-induced paw edema | Localization of anti-inflammatory effects | [ |
Figure 4Anti-inflammatory properties of silver nanomaterials are controlled by different mechanisms including T cell inhibition, anti-cell recruitment, anti-cytokine therapy, regulation of T cell receptor, and reducing the level of reactive oxygen species.
Figure 5Schematic showing 3D printed titanium implant incorporating spherical silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) capable of eradicating biofilm (1–4) and promoting bone repair (5–8). Reproduced from [149], with permission from American Chemical Society, 2016.
Figure 6Schematic illustration showing (A) the implantation of AgNPs-loaded collagen/chitosan scaffold and (B) the possible mechanism of accelerating cutaneous wound healing. Reproduced from [158] with permission from Springer Nature, 2017.
Figure 7Schematic diagram showing the concept of a drug-releasing antimicrobial vascular catheter. Reproduced from [163] with permission from Elsevier, 2017.