RESUMEN
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is widely used as ingredient in several products in the nanoform. TiO2-nanoparticles (NPs) are also currently studied for different medical applications. A large debate exists on possible adverse health effects related to their exposure. While there is some evidence of TiO2-NP central nervous system toxicity, their effects on peripheral neurons have been poorly explored. In this study we investigated the effects of TiO2-NPs on dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons and satellite glial cells that may be reached by nanoparticles from the bloodstream. We found that TiO2-NPs are internalized in DRG cells and induce apoptosis in a dose dependent manner in both types of cells, ROS production and changes in expression of proinflammatory cytokine IL-1ß. Furthermore, we found that the axonal retrograde transport is altered in neurons upon exposure to TiO2-NPs. Overall, the results indicate a potential neurotoxic effect of TiO2-NPs on DRG cells. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR: Exposure to titanium dioxide nanoparticles is increasing in medical practice. Little is known about their potential toxic effects on the peripheral nervous system. The authors studied this aspect and showed that titanium nanoparticles might potentially cause toxicity over long term.
Asunto(s)
Apoptosis/efectos de los fármacos , Ganglios Espinales/metabolismo , Nanopartículas del Metal , Titanio/metabolismo , Animales , Embrión de Pollo , Ganglios Espinales/citología , Ganglios Espinales/efectos de los fármacos , Interleucina-1beta/metabolismo , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo , Titanio/farmacologíaRESUMEN
The membranolytic activity of silica particles toward red blood cells (RBCs) has been known for a long time and is sometimes associated with silica pathogenicity. However, the molecular mechanism and the reasons why hemolysis differs according to the silica form are still obscure. A panel of 15 crystalline (pure and commercial) and amorphous (pyrogenic, precipitated from aqueous solutions, vitreous) silica samples differing in size, origin, morphology, and surface chemical composition were selected and specifically prepared. Silica particles were grouped into six groups to compare their potential in disrupting RBC membranes so that one single property differed in each group, while other features were constant. Free radical production and crystallinity were not strict determinants of hemolytic activity. Particle curvature and morphology modulated the hemolytic effect, but silanols and siloxane bridges at the surface were the main actors. Hemolysis was unrelated to the overall concentration of silanols as fully rehydrated surfaces (such as those obtained from aqueous solution) were inert, and one pyrogenic silica also lost its membranolytic potential upon progressive dehydration. Overall results are consistent with a model whereby hemolysis is determined by a defined surface distribution of dissociated/undissociated silanols and siloxane groups strongly interacting with specific epitopes on the RBC membrane.
Asunto(s)
Eritrocitos/efectos de los fármacos , Dióxido de Silicio/toxicidad , Aluminio/química , Cristalización , Eritrocitos/metabolismo , Radicales Libres/metabolismo , Hemólisis , Calor , Humanos , Iones/química , Tamaño de la Partícula , Dióxido de Silicio/química , Propiedades de SuperficieRESUMEN
Hydroxyapatite is the mineral component of human bones and teeth enamel and is used as synthetic biomaterial. It also grows outside bioglasses as a response of their incorporation in body fluids. The focus is then on understanding the microscopic steps occurring at its surfaces as this allows researchers to understand the key features of biomolecular adhesion. This perspective article deals with in silico simulations of these processes by quantum-mechanical methods based on density functional theory using the hybrid B3LYP functional and Gaussian basis functions.
Asunto(s)
Materiales Biocompatibles/química , Durapatita/química , Teoría Cuántica , Adsorción , Ácido Glutámico/química , Glicina/química , Lisina/química , Propiedades de Superficie , TermodinámicaRESUMEN
The joint use of microcalorimetric and computational approaches has been adopted to describe H2O interaction with cus Al(III) Lewis and Si(OH)+ Al- Brønsted acidic sites within H-BEA and H-MFI zeolites (both with approximately 6 Al/unit cell). Adsorption data obtained at 303 K were compared to experimental model systems, such as all-silica zeolites, amorphous silica, and silico-alumina, transition alumina. In parallel, ab initio molecular modeling was carried out to mimic, in a cluster approach, Lewis and Brønsted acidic sites, as well as a variety of Si-OH species either with H-bonding interacting (nests and pairs) or isolated. H-BEA and H-MFI water affinity values were found to be almost equivalent, in both quantitative and energetic terms, in that dominated by Al-containing sites population, more than by nanocavity topology or by acidic site nature. Both H-zeolites, saturated with approximately 5 Torr of H2O vapor, bind approximately 4 H2O per Al site, almost one of which is tightly bound and not eliminated by RT pumping-off. A 160 < q(diff) < 80 kJ/mol interval was measured for the adsorption up to 1H2O/Al. The zero-coverage heat of adsorption (q0 approximately 160 kJ/mol, for both H-zeolites) was assigned to H2O/Lewis complex formation, which dominates the early stage of the process, in agreement with the ab initio computed H2O/Lewis sites binding energy. The rather broad q(diff) interval was interpreted as due to the simultaneous adsorption of H2O on both structural Brønsted sites and strongly polarized H2O already adsorbed on Lewis sites. For this latter species, BE = 74 kJ/mol was computed, slightly higher than BE = 65 kJ/mol for H2O/Brønsted sites interaction, showing that H2O coordinated on cus Al(III) Lewis sites behaves as a structural Brønsted site. The investigated all-silica zeolites have been categorized as hydrophilic in that the measured heat of adsorption (100 < q(diff) < 44 kJ/mol) was larger than the heat of liquefaction of water (44 kJ/mol) in the whole coverage examined. Indeed, polar defects present in the hydrophobic Si-O-Si framework do form relatively stable H2O adducts. Crystalline versus amorphous aluminosilicate q(diff) versus n(ads) plots showed that the measured adsorption heat is lower than expected, due to the extraction work of Al atoms from the amorphous matrix to bring them in interaction with H2O. On the contrary, such an energy cost is not required for the crystalline material, in which acidic sites are already in place, as imposed by the rigidity of the framework. Modeling results supported the experimental data interpretation.
RESUMEN
The affinity towards water of a selection of well-defined, nanostructured hydroxyapatite (HA) samples was investigated by H(2)O vapour adsorption microcalorimetry and infrared (IR) spectroscopy. A large hydrophilicity of all investigated materials was confirmed. The surface features of hydrated HA were investigated on the as-synthesized samples pre-treated in mild conditions at T=303 K, whereas dehydrated HA features were characterized on samples activated at T=573 K. The relatively large hydrophilicity of the hydrated surface (-Δ(ads)H~100-50 kJ mol(-1)) was due to the interaction of water with the highly polarized H(2)O molecules strongly coordinated to the surface Ca(2+) cations. At the dehydrated surface, exposing coordinatively unsaturated (cus) Ca(2+) cations, H(2)O was still molecularly adsorbed but more strongly (-Δ(ads)H~120-90 kJ mol(-1)). The use of CO adsorption to quantify the Lewis acidic strength of HA surface sites revealed only a moderate strength of cus Ca(2+) cations, as confirmed by both microcalorimetric and IR spectroscopic measurements and ab initio calculations. This result implies that the large HA/H(2)O interaction energy is due to the interplay between cus Ca(2+) sites and nearby hydrophilic PO(4) groups, not revealed by the CO probe. The lower density of cus Ca(2+) cations at the 573 K activated HA surface with respect to the pristine one did not affect the whole hydrophilicity of the surface, as the polarizing effect of Ca sites is so strong to extend up to the fourth hydrated layer, as confirmed by both high-coverage microcalorimetric and IR spectroscopic data. No specific effects due to the investigated specimen preparation method and/or different morphology were observed.
Asunto(s)
Calcio/química , Monóxido de Carbono/química , Durapatita/química , Hidrógeno/química , Modelos Químicos , Nanoestructuras/química , Nanoestructuras/ultraestructura , Oxígeno/química , Ensayo de Materiales , Tamaño de la Partícula , Propiedades de SuperficieRESUMEN
Amorphous silicas, opposite to crystalline polymorphs, have been regarded so far as nonpathogenic, but few studies have addressed the toxicity of the wide array of amorphous silica forms. With the advent of nanotoxicology, there has been a rising concern about the safety of silica nanoparticles to be used in nanomedicine. Here, we report a study on the toxicity of amorphous nanostructured silicas obtained with two different preparation procedures (pyrolysis vs. precipitation), the pyrogenic in two very different particle sizes, in order to assess the role of size and origin on surface properties and on the cell damage, oxidative stress, and inflammatory response elicited in murine alveolar macrophages. A quartz dust was employed as positive control and monodispersed silica spheres as negative control. Pyrogenic silicas were remarkably more active than the precipitated one as to cytotoxicity, reactive oxygen species production, lipid peroxidation, nitric oxide synthesis, and production of tumor necrosis factor-α, when compared both per mass and per unit surface. Between the two pyrogenic silicas, the larger one was the more active. Silanols density is the major difference in surface composition among the three silicas, being much larger than the precipitated one as indicated by joint calorimetric and infrared spectroscopy analysis. We assume here that full hydroxylation of a silica surface, with consequent stable coverage by water molecules, reduces/inhibits toxic behavior. The preparation route appears thus determinant in yielding potentially toxic materials, although the smallest size does not always correspond to an increased toxicity.
Asunto(s)
Nanoestructuras , Dióxido de Silicio/química , Calorimetría , Peroxidación de Lípido , Microscopía Electrónica de Rastreo , Microscopía Electrónica de Transmisión , Tamaño de la Partícula , Especies Reactivas de Oxígeno/metabolismo , Espectroscopía Infrarroja por Transformada de Fourier , Sustancias Reactivas al Ácido Tiobarbitúrico , Difracción de Rayos XRESUMEN
H2O adsorption on hexagonal hydroxyapatite (001) and (010) stoichiometric surfaces has been studied at B3LYP level with a localized Gaussian basis set of polarized double-zeta quality using the periodic CRYSTAL06 code. Because four Ca2+ cations are available at both surfaces, the considered H2O coverages span the 1/4Asunto(s)
Durapatita/química
, Agua/química
, Adsorción
, Calcio/química
, Calorimetría
, Simulación por Computador
, Modelos Moleculares
, Conformación Molecular
, Espectrofotometría Infrarroja
, Propiedades de Superficie
, Vibración
RESUMEN
Siliceous sponges, one of the few animal groups involved in a biosilicification process, deposit hydrated silica in discrete skeletal elements called spicules. A multidisciplinary analysis of the structural features of the protein axial filaments inside the spicules of a number of marine sponges, belonging to two different classes (Demospongiae and Hexactinellida), is presented, together with a preliminary analysis of the biosilicification process. The study was carried out by a unique combination of techniques: fiber diffraction using synchrotron radiation, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), differential scanning calorimetric (DSC), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and molecular modeling. From a phylogenetic point of view, the main result is the structural difference between the dimension and packing of the protein units in the spicule filaments of the Demospongiae and the Hexactinellida species. Models of the protein organization in the spicule axial filaments, consistent with the various experimental evidences, are given. The three different species of demosponges analyzed have similar general structural features, but they differ in the degree of order. The structural information on the spicule axial filaments can help shed some light on the still unknown molecular mechanisms controlling biosilicification.