AI Article Synopsis

  • Zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO NPs) are used in various applications, but their behavior in living organisms is not well understood, leading this study to create a pharmacokinetic model for their interactions in mice.
  • The study estimated key parameters such as partition coefficients and elimination rates for different sizes of ZnO NPs and compared them to zinc nitrate, discovering that smaller ZnO NPs have a higher tendency to accumulate in tissues, especially the lungs.
  • The findings suggest that after a certain period, ZnO NPs may decompose into zinc ions, indicating the need for careful consideration regarding the potential long-term exposure effects of smaller ZnO NPs.

Article Abstract

Zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO NPs) have been widely used in consumer products, therapeutic agents, and drug delivery systems. However, the fate and behavior of ZnO NPs in living organisms are not well described. The purpose of this study was to develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetic model to describe the dynamic interactions of (65)ZnO NPs in mice. We estimated key physicochemical parameters of partition coefficients and excretion or elimination rates, based on our previously published data quantifying the biodistributions of 10 nm and 71 nm (65)ZnO NPs and zinc nitrate ((65)Zn(NO3)2) in various mice tissues. The time-dependent partition coefficients and excretion or elimination rates were used to construct our physiologically based pharmacokinetic model. In general, tissue partition coefficients of (65)ZnO NPs were greater than those of (65)Zn(NO3)2, particularly the lung partition coefficient of 10 nm (65)ZnO NPs. Sensitivity analysis revealed that 71 nm (65)ZnO NPs and (65)Zn(NO3)2 were sensitive to excretion and elimination rates in the liver and gastrointestinal tract. Although the partition coefficient of the brain was relative low, it increased time-dependently for (65)ZnO NPs and (65)Zn(NO3)2. The simulation of (65)Zn(NO3)2 was well fitted with the experimental data. However, replacing partition coefficients of (65)ZnO NPs with those of (65)Zn(NO3)2 after day 7 greatly improved the fitness of simulation, suggesting that ZnO NPs might decompose to zinc ion after day 7. In this study, we successfully established a potentially predictive dynamic model for slowly decomposed NPs. More caution is suggested for exposure to (65)ZnO NPs <10 nm because those small (65)ZnO NPs tend to accumulate in the body for a relatively longer time than 71 nm (65)ZnO NPs and (65)Zn(NO3)2 do.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4599717PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S86785DOI Listing

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