Research
finds that big and small nanoparticles
affect most genes similarly.
The smallest nano-sized silica particles used in biomedicine and engineering likely won’t cause
unexpected biological responses due to their size, according to work presented
recently by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). The result should
allay fears that cells and tissues might react unpredictably when exposed to
the finest silica nanomaterials in industrial or commercial applications.
Nanotoxicologist Brian Thrall and his
colleagues found that, for the most part, size doesn’t matter. The
researchers used total surface area as a measure of dose, rather than particle
mass or number of particles, and observed how cultured cells responded
biologically. “If you consider surface area as the dose metric, then you get
similar types of responses independent of the size of the particle,” said
Thrall. “That suggests the chemistry that drives the biological responses doesn’t
change when you get down to the smallest nanoparticle.”
Dose Measurements
Whether or not
nanoparticles are safe for human consumption is not yet clear. In some cases,
previous work suggested that nanoparticles become more toxic to cells the
smaller the particles get. One difficulty in measuring toxicity is that not
everyone agrees on which kind of dose unit to compare. Some researchers measure
the dose by total weight, some by the number of particles. Neither method
distinguishes whether a nanomaterial’s toxicity is due to the inherent nature
of the material or the particle size under scrutiny. “Different dose metrics
give different impressions of which particles are more toxic,” said Thrall.
To find out, Thrall and his colleagues at PNNL measured the dose at which the
particles caused a biological response. The biological response was either the
death of the cell or a change in which genes the cell turned on and off. When
the scientists calculated doses by particle number or mass, the amount needed
to generate a biological response was all over the map. They discovered that
the best way to pinpoint how toxic the particles are to cells was to calculate
the dose based on the nanomaterial’s total surface area. Only when they
considered the surface area of the dose could the researchers predict the
biological response.
Smaller and Smaller
The researchers found that the biological response was very
similar regardless of the size of the nanoparticles. Inside cells, some genes
responded to nanoparticles by ramping up or down. More than 76% of these genes
behaved the same for all nanoparticle sizes tested. This indicated to the
researchers that, for these genes, the nanoparticles didn’t pick up weird
chemical properties as they shrunk in size.
However, the team did find some genes for
which size did matter. Smaller particles appeared to affect genes that might be
involved in inflammation, while larger particles appeared to affect genes that
transport positively charged atoms into cells. This latter result could be due
to metals contaminating the preparation of the larger particles, Thrall
suggested. Overall, the results contribute to a better understanding of what
goes on at the nanoscale.
“The big fear is that you’d see unique
biological pathways being affected when you get down to the nanoscale,” said
Thrall. “For the most part, we didn’t see that.”
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