Cytotoxicity of 2D engineered nanomaterials in pulmonary and corneal epithelium.

NanoImpact

Center for Health and the Environment, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA, USA; Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Cell Biology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California-Davis, Davis, CA, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • 2D engineered nanomaterials are extensively utilized in products due to their distinct properties, but they can be aerosolized during manufacturing and might negatively interact with biological tissues like the lungs and eyes.
  • Eight different 2D nanomaterials, including various forms of graphene and hexagonal boron nitride, were tested for their toxic effects on epithelial cells from murine and human sources.
  • Hexagonal boron nitride demonstrated cytotoxicity across multiple cell types but did not inhibit wound healing at lower, non-toxic concentrations, highlighting the need for cautious use of nanomaterials due to varying toxicity depending on cell type.

Article Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) engineered nanomaterials are widely used in consumer and industrial goods due to their unique chemical and physical characteristics. Engineered nanomaterials are incredibly small and capable of being aerosolized during manufacturing, with the potential for biological interaction at first-contact sites such as the eye and lung. The unique properties of 2D nanomaterials that make them of interest to many industries may also cause toxicity towards epithelial cells. Using murine and human respiratory epithelial cell culture models, we tested the cytotoxicity of eight 2D engineered nanomaterials: graphene (110 nm), graphene oxide (2 um), graphene oxide (400 nm), reduced graphene oxide (2 um), reduced graphene oxide (400 nm), partially reduced graphene oxide (400 nm), molybdenum disulfide (400 nm), and hexagonal boron nitride (150 nm). Non-graphene nanomaterials were also tested in human corneal epithelial cells for ocular epithelial cytotoxicity. Hexagonal boron nitride was found to be cytotoxic in mouse tracheal, human alveolar, and human corneal epithelial cells. Hexagonal boron nitride was also tested for inhibition of wound healing in alveolar epithelial cells; no inhibition was seen at sub-cytotoxic doses. Nanomaterials should be considered with care before use, due to specific regional cytotoxicity that also varies by cell type. Supported by U01ES027288 and T32HL007013 and T32ES007059.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9205178PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.impact.2022.100404DOI Listing

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