The increasing use of magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) in biomedical applications has prompted ex- tensive investigation of their interactions with biological systems also through animal models. A variety of toxic effects have been detected in NP-exposed fish and fish embryos, including oxidative stress and associated changes, such as lipid oxidation, apoptosis, and gene expression alterations. The main exposure route for fish is through food and the food web. This study was devised to investigate the effects of silica-coated NP admin- istration through food in zebrafish (ZF, Danio rerio). Silica-coated magnetic NPs were administered to ZF through feed (zooplankton) from day 1 to 15 posthatching (ph). Larvae were examined 6 and 15 days ph and adults 3 and 6 months ph. A multidisciplinary approach, including morphometric examination; light, trans- mission electron, and confocal microscopy; inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry; and real-time polymerase chain reaction, was applied to detect NP accumulation, structural and ultrastructural damage, and activation of detoxification processes in larvae and adults. Our findings document that the silica-coated NPs: (1) do not induce toxicity in ZF, (2) are excreted through feces, and (3) do not activate detoxification processes or promote tissue/cell injury.
Transfer of Silica-Coated Magnetic (Fe3O4) Nanoparticles Through Food: A Molecular and Morphological Study in Zebrafish / Chiara Carla Piccinetti; Costanza Montis; Massimo Bonini; Rosaria Laurà; Maria Cristina Guerrera; Giuseppe Radaelli; Fabio Vianello; Veronica Santinelli; Francesca Maradonna; Valentina Nozzi; Andrea Miccoli; Ike Olivotto. - In: ZEBRAFISH. - ISSN 1545-8547. - STAMPA. - 11:(2014), pp. 567-579. [10.1089/zeb.2014.1037]
Transfer of Silica-Coated Magnetic (Fe3O4) Nanoparticles Through Food: A Molecular and Morphological Study in Zebrafish
MONTIS, COSTANZA;BONINI, MASSIMO;
2014
Abstract
The increasing use of magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) in biomedical applications has prompted ex- tensive investigation of their interactions with biological systems also through animal models. A variety of toxic effects have been detected in NP-exposed fish and fish embryos, including oxidative stress and associated changes, such as lipid oxidation, apoptosis, and gene expression alterations. The main exposure route for fish is through food and the food web. This study was devised to investigate the effects of silica-coated NP admin- istration through food in zebrafish (ZF, Danio rerio). Silica-coated magnetic NPs were administered to ZF through feed (zooplankton) from day 1 to 15 posthatching (ph). Larvae were examined 6 and 15 days ph and adults 3 and 6 months ph. A multidisciplinary approach, including morphometric examination; light, trans- mission electron, and confocal microscopy; inductively coupled plasma emission spectrometry; and real-time polymerase chain reaction, was applied to detect NP accumulation, structural and ultrastructural damage, and activation of detoxification processes in larvae and adults. Our findings document that the silica-coated NPs: (1) do not induce toxicity in ZF, (2) are excreted through feces, and (3) do not activate detoxification processes or promote tissue/cell injury.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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