Publication | Closed Access
Importance of agglomeration state and exposure conditions for uptake and pro-inflammatory responses to amorphous silica nanoparticles in bronchial epithelial cells
46
Citations
44
References
2011
Year
NanoparticlesRhodamine-coated SinpsEngineeringImmunotoxicologyImmunologyExposure ConditionsNanotoxicologyBiomedical EngineeringRhodamine SinpsImmune SystemImmunotherapyProtein NanoparticlesInflammationInflammatory MarkerImmunochemistryLung DepositionAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityImmune FunctionPharmacologyAgglomeration StateCytokineBronchial Epithelial CellsMedicineSurface ReactivityExtracellular Matrix
Amorphous silica nanoparticles (SiNPs, 30 and 50 nm) and rhodamine-coated SiNPs (50 nm) were examined for their ability to induce pro-inflammatory responses and cytotoxicity in BEAS-2B cells under different experimental conditions. The SiNPs formed micrometre-sized agglomerates in the absence of bovine serum albumin (BSA) in the culture medium, whereas with BSA (0.1%) they were much less agglomerated. All the SiNPs induced IL-6 and IL-8 responses, as measured by ELISA and real-time PCR. The responses were more marked without BSA and higher for the rhodamine SiNPs than the plain ones. Rhodamine SiNPs were not taken up by cells during a 3-h exposure, even though cytokine mRNAs were up-regulated. In conclusion, agglomerated SiNPs induced more potent cytokine responses than the non-agglomerated ones; either due to the agglomeration state per se or more conceivably to a change in surface reactivity against cellular targets due to BSA. Furthermore, cytokine expression was up-regulated independently of SiNP uptake.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1