| Literature DB >> 32664325 |
Nemi Malhotra1, Jiann-Shing Lee2, Rhenz Alfred D Liman3, Johnsy Margotte S Ruallo3, Oliver B Villaflores4, Tzong-Rong Ger1, Chung-Der Hsiao5,6,7.
Abstract
The noteworthy intensification in the development of nanotechnology has led to the development of various types of nanoparticles. The diverse applications of these nanoparticles make them desirable candidate for areas such as drug delivery, coasmetics, medicine, electronics, and contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and so on. Iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles are a branch of nanoparticles which is specifically being considered as a contrast agent for MRI as well as targeted drug delivery vehicles, angiogenic therapy and chemotherapy as small size gives them advantage to travel intravascular or intracavity actively for drug delivery. Besides the mentioned advantages, the toxicity of the iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles is still less explored. For in vivo applications magnetic nanoparticles should be nontoxic and compatible with the body fluids. These particles tend to degrade in the body hence there is a need to understand the toxicity of the particles as whole and degraded products interacting within the body. Some nanoparticles have demonstrated toxic effects such inflammation, ulceration, and decreases in growth rate, decline in viability and triggering of neurobehavioral alterations in plants and cell lines as well as in animal models. The cause of nanoparticles' toxicity is attributed to their specific characteristics of great surface to volume ratio, chemical composition, size, and dosage, retention in body, immunogenicity, organ specific toxicity, breakdown and elimination from the body. In the current review paper, we aim to sum up the current knowledge on the toxic effects of different magnetic nanoparticles on cell lines, marine organisms and rodents. We believe that the comprehensive data can provide significant study parameters and recent developments in the field. Thereafter, collecting profound knowledge on the background of the subject matter, will contribute to drive research in this field in a new sustainable direction.Entities:
Keywords: aquatic organism; cell; magnetic nanoparticle; rodent; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664325 PMCID: PMC7397295 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25143159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Characteristic properties of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs). Physical properties like particle size, solubility, surface chemistry, shape, concentration, and chemical composition, determined at a broad scale to analyze subsequent toxicity caused by them in cell lines (normal/contaminated) and model organisms are summarized in the left panel (highlighted by blue color). The procedures to observe the underlying mechanism of toxicity, immunogenicity, metabolism, bioavailability and biodegradation under different parameters for designing MNPs more specifically for biomedical applications safely are summarized in the right panel (highlighted in orange color). See the Table 1 summary for detailed literature citations.
Summary of iron oxide magnetic nanoparticle (MNPS) toxicity. Extensive amount of work is going on in area of toxicity studies of MNPs in various different combinations with appropriate enhancement with ligands, antibodies, polymeric coating, green synthesis, infusion of drug, hyperthermia application and external magnetic control with retention in superparamagnetism to be able to detect and direct MNPs at desired location. With many papers coming up each year in the field we have compiled a list of papers from year 2015–2019 to indicated the different types of (iron oxide) MNPs used in different kind of models recently to study the toxicological response of these MNPs.
| Type of MNPs | Size and Shape of Tested MNPs | Model Organism (In Vitro or in Vivo Test) | Method of Toxicity Analysis | Treatment Condition (Time and Dose) | Results | Ref. |
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| 72.6 ± 0.6 nm spheroid | THP-1 cells and female CD(R) IGS rats | Biochemical marker in rat blood after treatment | In vitro: 100, 800 and 1600 μg/mL 24 h | Fe3O4-MNPs cytotoxicity in erythrocytes in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| 15 nm | Adult zebrafish | Behavioral and biochemical assessment in adult zebrafish | 14 days waterborne incubation at 1 and 10 ppm | Uncoated MNPs exhibited behavior and biochemical safety at 1ppm but display neurobehavioral toxicity at 10 ppm | [ | |
| 15 nm and 225 nm spherical | A549 cells and Male Balb/c mice | Cell viability assay | In vitro:10–80 μg/mL | Magnetic nanomaterials did not indicate inherent toxicity | [ | |
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| 8 nm, 25 nm and 50 nm | BeWo b30 placental barrier model | Lactase dehydrogenase (LDH) in cell culture | 4, 24 or 48 h | Iron oxide MNPS triggers cytotoxicity at lower doses and shorter exposure compared with silica NPs | [ |
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| 6 ± 1.2 nm 8 ± 2.7 nm | HeLa, A549 and HeK293 cells | MTT assay | 24, 48 and 72 h 0.5, 2, 4 μg/µL | INPs triggers toxic effects in Hek293, A549 and Hela cells in comparison to CSO-INPs | [ |
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| 11 ± 3 nm | HeP G2 cells | MTT assay | 24 and 48 h | Cytotoxicity of naked SPION increased in relation to increasing concentration | [ |
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| 28–30 nm | Male and female Crl:CD1(ICR) (CD-1) mice | Dams: gestation period of toxicity | Gestation day 8, 9, or 10 | A low dose of NPs, regardless of charge, did not induce toxicity; high exposure led to charge-dependent fetal loss | [ |
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| 8.4 nm spherical | NIH3T3 cells | FluoStar Optima microplate reader | 24 h | Reduced toxicity towards normal cells, enhancing the potential of magnetic hyperthermia in cancer treatment | [ |
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| 15 nm | MCF-7 cells | MTT assay | 1 h–72 h | MCF-7 accumulated NPs without effect on cell morphology, ROS generation and cell viability | [ |
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| MNP: 10 nm | Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells injected intraperitoneally into female Balb/c mice | Histological examination | 20 mice group | Best therapeutic anti-cancer activity and lowest systemic toxicity compared to free DOX | [ |
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| 205 ± 3 nm spherical | BEL7402 cancer cells | MTT assay | 72 h | Concentration dependent cytotoxicity in BEL7402 cancer cells | [ |
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| 100 nm | Rat PC 12 cells (ATCC) | Cell-viability assay | 1 h–72 h | Uncoated- Fe3O4 MNPs maximum interaction and entered inside cell with no cytotoxic effect | [ |
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| MNPs 33–277.9 nm | chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane model (CAM) | Morphological analysis | 24 h | 50–100 nm diameter range MNPs had no embolic risk, on a safety intravenous administration. Tissue MNPs deposits were biocompatible with embryos and chicken | [ |
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| Not available | Human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells | Quantitative/qualitative flow cytometry of apoptosis and necrosis | External hyperthermia (EHT), Magnetic hyperthermia (MHT) | A maximum difference in cytotoxicity approximately 45% was observed at T0 = 46 °C. | [ |
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| 3.98, 4.09, 3.41, 4.32, 2.35 nm globular | HFF2 cell lines | MTT assay | 72 h | IONPs were biocompatible and nontoxic with the cell line HFF2 | [ |
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| 109 ± 1 nm | CD47-positive pancreatic cancer cells | Resazurin dye | 24 h | Cytotoxic activity of the multifunctional Nano formulation is not increased in the in vitro studies | [ |
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| 21 ± 4 nm | Magnet and Sham mice | MTT assay | 24 h | Al-MNPs only caused a significant reduction in cell viability at 500 μg/mL | [ |
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| 43.72 ± 4.73 nm | MCF-7 cell lines | MTT assay | 48 and 72 h | MTX-conjugated NPs: reduction in cellular viability in human breast cancer (MCF-7) cells compared to free MTX over time | [ |
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| 22.19 ± 3.58 nm | HEK-293 | Hemolysis test and MTT assays | 72 h | Cytotoxicity study, F@Tyr@TMX NPs exhibited more cytotoxic effects than free TMX | [ |
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| 10–30 nm | SKOV-3 RAW 264.7 | LDH assay, Hemolysis, ROS, MMP Cell cycle analysis, in vivo bio-distribution, toxicity | Hemolysis: 200 µL, 4 h. | No obvious toxicity was found for PEGylated IONPs in BALB/c mice, whereas PEI-coated IONPs exhibited dose-dependent lethal toxicity | [ |
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| 56 ± 11.43 nm, spherical | HFF2 | Cell viability by MTT assay | 72 and 96 h | F@BSA@CUR NPs had much higher cytotoxicity against MCF7 cells | [ |
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| 55 nm round shape | In vitro: Rat C6 glioma, human U87 glioma, and human cervix carcinoma HeLa cells and Male Wistar rats | Histology analysis | 24 h | Increase in surface charge of the NPs due to the chitosan coating enhanced the intracellular uptake of particles and thus increased their cytotoxic activity. | [ |
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| 50–100 nm | In vitro: Reduction of acrylamide in food model system | Deactivation rate constant (Kd) of free and immobilized enzyme | Five cycles of pretreatment | It was found to be more than three-fold increase their thermal stability from free enzyme and retained 90% activity after fifth cycle | [ |
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| 3–20 nm | Mouse microglial cell line N13 and Zebrafish embryos | Teratogenicity assay | In vitro: 0.1 to 100 μg/mL | No significant cytotoxicity, till 24 h; No mortality or malformations were observed in the embryos exposed to different doses of particles at 48 hpf. At 100 μg/mL high percentage of mortality 6 dpf | [ |
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| 17.9 ± 3.9 nm | PC12 and ReN cell VM | Cell Viability LIVE/DEAD Staining | 24 h | Coated MNPs decreased cytotoxic effects; Significant differences in toxicological profiles in two mammalian cell lines | [ |
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| 24 nm | Adult zebrafish | Multiple behavioral and biochemical tests | 1 and 10 ppm exposure for 14 days | Carbon-coated MNPs can significantly enhance its biosafety by reducing neurobehavioral toxicities compared to the bare MNPs | [ |
Figure 2Potential toxicity effects of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) collected from in vitro and in vivo experiments. The common strategies for risk assessment for MNPs, including cell culture, zebrafish, chicken and rodents are summarized in the central yellow panel. The potential toxicity effects of MNPs have been categorized by mechanism, such as inhibition of cellular proliferation, temporary/absolute cell cycle cessation, DNA genotoxicity, damage of cellular components and aggregation to blocking of cell membranes on a cellular level. Some studies have reported MNPs’ toxicity effects on a whole organism level and elaborated the interactions of MNPs inside the body (see the summary in Table 1 for detail literature citations).