| Literature DB >> 35295119 |
Anna Bencsik1, Philippe Lestaevel2.
Abstract
After a short background discussing engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) and their physicochemical properties and applications, the present perspective paper highlights the main specific points that need to be considered when examining the question of neurotoxicity of nanomaterials. It underlines the necessity to integrate parameters, specific tools, and tests from multiple sources that make neurotoxicology when applied to nanomaterials particularly complex. Bringing together the knowledge of multiple disciplines e.g., nanotoxicology to neurotoxicology, is necessary to build integrated neurotoxicology for the third decade of the 21st Century. This article focuses on the greatest challenges and opportunities offered by this specific field. It highlights the scientific, methodological, political, regulatory, and educational issues. Scientific and methodological challenges include the determination of ENMs physicochemical parameters, the lack of information about protein corona modes of action, target organs, and cells and dose- response functions of ENMs. The need of standardization of data collection and harmonization of dedicated neurotoxicological protocols are also addressed. This article highlights how to address those challenges through innovative methods and tools, and our work also ventures to sketch the first list of substances that should be urgently prioritized for human modern neurotoxicology. Finally, political support with dedicated funding at the national and international levels must also be used to engage the communities concerned to set up dedicated educational program on this novel field.Entities:
Keywords: AOP; characterization; engineered nanomaterials; human health; neurotoxicology; protein corona; risk assessment; substance prioritization
Year: 2021 PMID: 35295119 PMCID: PMC8915904 DOI: 10.3389/ftox.2021.629256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Toxicol ISSN: 2673-3080
Figure 1(A) The physicochemical parameters of ENMs, such as size, shape, size distribution, composition, aggregation, surface charge, corona, crystalline nature, and porosity, are unique features. The biological activities of ENMs depend on the physicochemical parameters usually not considered in toxicological studies. Because of this dependence, the toxicological studies of ENMs requires a dual approach: (1) a physicochemical one that allows the measurement of the impact of biological environments on the ENMs, notably to evaluate the dissolution ability of the ENMs that would enable further interactions with the cells and (2) a toxicological one that assesses the impact of ENMs on biomolecules, on cells, organs, organisms, and ecosystems. (B). Contrary to the bulk chemical substance that may enter into contact with biological fluids or not, the NPs have a greater chance to enter the body thanks to their nanosize. Once in the biological compartment, a protein corona instantaneously recovers the NPs. Made of biomolecules, their composition depends on the site of entry and the organ considered, (e.g., surfactant proteins in the lung or plasmatic proteins in the blood vessels), this corona gives a new biological identity to the NPs. The corona composition may influence surface charge, dispersity, solubility, nanoparticle transport and thus biodistribution, cellular binding and uptake, internalization process, bioclearance. Inside the cell, the biological entity represents the key event in the adverse outcome pathways (AOP) concept. It triggers successive interactions at the molecular and organelle levels and leads to cellular responses, most often related to oxidative responses and inflammation. (C). Graphical abstract that illustrates the distinct complexity of neurotoxicology applied to nanomaterials. The lower part exemplifies the KEs and the subsequent AOPs related to biomodification resulting from nervous system exposure to NPs.