| Literature DB >> 35424851 |
Wasefa Begum1, Summi Rai2, Soujanya Banerjee1, Sudip Bhattacharjee3, Monohar Hossain Mondal3, Ajaya Bhattarai2, Bidyut Saha1.
Abstract
This review contains up-to-date knowledge and recent advancements on the essentiality, sources, and toxicological profile of nickel and its different compounds. Nickel is a recognized essential element for several important biological processes like the healthy growth of plants, animals, and soil/water microbes; though an excess amount of nickel intoxicates flora and fauna. Nickel is found to affect the photosynthetic function of higher plants; it can severely degrade soil fertility and causes many chronic diseases in humans. Due to the huge growth in the nickel industry and consumption of nickel-containing products, environmental pollution has become inevitable by the element nickel and also varieties of its by-products through all the phases of making, utilization and dumping. We have focused on the importance of agenda 2030 (UN 17 SDGs) during the preparation of the write-up and have highlighted goals 3, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 by elaborately discussing associated points. The plausible molecular mechanism of nickel toxicity is presented in simple diagrams. The article elaborates on possible methods for remediation of nickel toxicity and the treatment of nickel dermatitis and nickel cancer. Recent advancements in the understanding of the dual aspects of nickel as beneficial and a carcinogen are the key subject of this article. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35424851 PMCID: PMC8985085 DOI: 10.1039/d2ra00378c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Nickel uptake model in a living cell.
Fig. 2A schematic representation of the flow injection model used for the determination of total and dissolved labile Ni(ii) in various environmental water samples. P1 and P2: peristaltic pumps; B: blank; E: eluent; BS: buffer solution; M: mixing coil; DC: digestion chamber; FAAS: flame atomic absorption spectrometer; IV: injection valve; MC: microcolumn containing the resin Serdolit Chelite Che; S/SS: sample or standard solution; SV1, SV2, SV3 and SV4: selecting valves; UB: ultrasonic bath; UW: ultrapure water; W: waste. This scheme is represented with permission from reference no. [53]. Copyright SciRes 2011 (http://www.SciRP.org/journal/ajac).
Scheme 1Schematic representation of nickel toxicity in plants.
Scheme 2Schematic representation of nickel toxicity in humans.
Extreme health effects: acute toxicity, subchronic toxicity, and chronic toxicity due to nickel exposure in humans and rats[67]
| Toxicity | Acute toxicity | Subchronic toxicity | Chronic toxicity | |
| Exposure period | 01 day | 10–100 days | >100 days | |
| Route of exposure | Exposure to nickel fumes and nickel dust, nickel polluted water, and direct consumption or inhalation of nickel compounds | Exposure to nickel fumes and soluble nickel compound | Occupational exposure to nickel dust | |
| Extreme health effects | On human | Respiratory distress syndrome, cardiac arrest | Tubular dysfunction, visual dysfunction | Asthma, bronchitis, pulmonary and nasal cancer, disruption in oxidative phosphorylation |
| On rats | Renal damage, frank hematuria | Liver and kidney failure, hyperglycemia, ataxia, hypothermia, diarrhoea, lung fibrosis | Loss of kidney weight with significant albuminuria, emphysema | |
Fig. 3Generalmechanism of nickel carcinogenesis.
Fig. 4Nickel induced oxidative stress.
Fig. 5Nickel carcinogenesis: DNA damage (cancer).