Aquatic nanotoxicolgy
Transcription
Aquatic nanotoxicolgy
Environnement Environment Canada Canada Aquatic nanotoxicolgy Research perspectives Gagné , F., Gagnon, C., Blaise, C., Eullafroy, P. Fluvial Ecosystem Research, AEPRD, Water Science & Technology Environment Canada, Montréal, Qc. Presentation outline z z z z z z z Preamble – nanotechnology Program g description, p ,p partners and funding… g Highlights on exposure characterization Aquatic q toxicity y tests Different aspects of nanoparticle toxicity Biomarkers research Perspectives Nanotechnology Preamble 1) Nanomaterials (NM) are materials associated to the colloidal phase i.e., have properties of fine particles and dissolved matter with high surface area; 2) NM refers to macromolecules where at least one dimension is in the 1 1-100 100 nm range; 3) It is estimated that investments in nanotechnology will reach 1 trillion $ by 2012; 4) The pollution picture will likely change and will require to revise, revise or re re-consider consider some aspects at least of, our current risk assessment paradigm. « These NM will likely benefit our quality of life in many aspects such as medical and industrial applications, biotechnology and even remediation processes, they are not exempt of potential toxicity to humans and wildlife (Moore 2006) (Moore, 2006).» » Problems for the environment ? (Believed it or not; here it comes comes…)) A written survey of 40 companies working with nanomaterials in Germanyy and Switzerland revealed that : 1) The nanomaterials examined exhibited such a diversity of properties that a categorization according to risk and material issues could not be made; 2) Twenty-six companies (65%) indicated that they did not perform any risk assessment of their nanomaterials and 13 companies (32.5%) performed risk assessments sometimes or always; y 3) Fate of nanomaterials in the use and disposal stage received little attention by industry and the majority of companies did not foresee unintentional release of nanomaterials throughout the life cycle cycle. Helland et al., Environ. Sci. Technol. 2008, 42, 640–646 Nanotechnology Preamble « The space domain of these NM is congruent to the space where biological macromolecules interact to assist life-related processes » Nanotechnology will likely increase pollution at this scale with perhaps unprecedented toxic effects. The nanotoxicology research program at Montréal Ecotoxicology of nanomatérials (NM) Occurrence and persistence in aquatic ecoystems (C. Gagnon, P. Turcotte) Size fractionation of NM Occurrence and fate in effluents and surface waters Bioavailability in fish and mussels Microbiotests (Blaise, C., M.Douville, S. Trépanier) Biomarkers research (J. Auclair, F. Gagné) Toxicity of NMs (microbioassays) Solid and liquid phases Allosteric toxicity Oxidative stress Genotoxicity Effects of particle size and surface properties Effects studies in mussels exposed to ME Toxicogenomics (G. vanAggelen, K. Bull, F. Gagné) Trout genomics Bivalve genomics Partners…. 1) St-Lawrence River toxicology research network (CIRE) - A network of university and governmental researchers dedicated to ecotoxicology gy of the SLR; - Aquatic nanotoxicology node (FG) was created in 2007 http://www.ecotox.uquebec.ca/programmes.htm; 2) Prof. Michel Fournier, Immunotoxicology of nanotechnology (IAF-INRS) 3) Dr Tibor Kovacs and Pierre Martel. Pulp and paper research institute of Canada (FPinnovations-PAPRICAN) on nanocrystalline cellulose (tensil strenght > steel); 4)) Dusica Maysinger, y g Pharmacology gy Department, p Mc Gill University y - Ageing effects on the cytotoxicity of coated CdTe quantum dots to fish liver cells; 5) Geoffrey Sunahara, Bernard Lachance, Pierres-Yves Robidoux, Biotechnology Research Institute, Montréal - Evaluation of CdTe quantum dots to human cell lines; effects of size of the nanoparticle; 6) Sébastien Sauvé, Chemistry dept, Montréal University - Bioavailability and toxicity of CdTe quantum dots in freshwater mussels; 7) Graham vanAggelen at EC in vancouver (PESC) - Toxicogenomics of CdTe quantum dots in rainbow trout (DNA microarrays). OECD list: a proposed working plan z z z z z z z z z z z z z z Fullerenes (C60) ( ) SWCNTs MWCNTs Silver nanoparticles I Iron nanoparticles ti l Carbon black Titanium dioxide Aluminum dioxide Cerium oxide Zinc oxide Silicon dioxide Polystyrene Dendrimers Nanoclays We should try to focus on the NMs that are: 1) likely to be found in water column/suspended matter; 2) produced at sufficient quantity ; 3) analytical feasibility; 4) th those acting ti as ““endocrine d i di disrupters” t ” ii.e. producing effects at very low concentrations. Exposure characterization in aquatic ecosystems Issues 1) Where will NM partition in the aquatic environment? Solubility of nanomaterials in distilled water1. Nanomaterials Chemical compositon Solubility2 (%) Solubility rank Copper zinc iron oxide CuZnFe2O4 2 4 Nickel zinc iron oxide NiZnFe2O4 2 4 Yttrium iron oxide Y3Fe5O12 4 3 Titanium oxide TiO2 2 4 Fulleren-C60 C60 9 2 Strontium ferrite SrFe12O19 4 3 Indium-tin oxide In2O3 • (SnO2)x9 0.8 5 Samarium oxide Sm2O3 3 3 Erbium oxide Er2O3 0.9 5 Holmium oxide Ho2O3 2 4 Single-walled carbon nanotube C 2 4 Quantum dots CdTe 20 1 1. A suspension p of the nanopowders p were resuspended p in distilled water and allowed to mix for 24 h at room temperature in the dark. After this mixing period, the solution was filtered through a 0.22 µm pore membrane and filtrate materials were analyzed by gravimetry. 2. Colloidal partition coefficient was determined by the dry weight of the eluate/dry weight of the suspension expressed in percentage. Issues 1) Where will NM partition in the aquatic environment?....continued. NOM caused disaggregation of nC60 crystals and aggregates under typical solution conditions of natural water, leading to significant changes in particle size and morphology; these effects increased with increasing NOM concentration (Xie et al., 2008. Environ. Sci. Technol. 42, 2853–2859). Environmental fate of nanomaterials (C. Gagnon) Exposure characterization in aquatic ecosystems Nanoparticles - Processes P in i A Aquatic ti E Environment: i t Ex.: Quantum dots Aggregation CdTe Dissociation ~ 5 nm Cd Te Cd2+, Cd-L Cd Membrane permeable Metal associations Bioaccumulation, Toxicity Particle size fractionation by ultrafiltration CdTe 100 %C Cd per fractio on Milli-Q water Surface water 10 1 Total < 0,45 0 45 µm < 0,1 0 1 µm < 30 KDa Size distribution < 10 KDa < 1 KDa Aquatic toxicity tests 1) Toxicity of 11 NMs using a test battery (bacteria, algae, microcrustacean, Hydra and trout hepatocytes) Toxicity classification of nanopowders based on European Union Commission Guideline 93/67/EEC and the most sensitive bioassay measurement endpoint values (i.e., LCx/ECx/ICx, etc). Extremely Toxic (< 0.1 mg/L) Very Toxic (0.1 – 1 mg/L) Toxic (1-10 mg/L) Not Toxic Harmful (10-100 mg/L) (> 100 mg/L) NiZnFeO TiO YFeO SmO SrFeO ErO Ful-C60 CuZnFeO InSnO CNSW HoO Toxic spread index Median Min-Max (155) CNTSW (19) Ful-C60 (25) Nanopro oducts ErO SmO (108) (100) InSnO (6.5) SrFeO (229) HoO (48) TiO YtFeO (16) NiZnFeO (134) (71) CuZnFeO 1 5 50 Concentration (mg/L) 500 Biomarker research activities Fundamental aspects of nanomaterials. The introduction of nanoparticles in aquatic ecosystems will bring about and new potentially toxic interactions in exposed organisms. Primary interaction from the leaching of constitutive molecules Size effects (aggregation) Surface properties local electric/ magnetic fields, energy transfers leading to reactive oxygen species Adducts Add t Detoxication mechanism Elimination Change in protein folding, Loss of structure-function equilibrium, DNA destabilization, Protein turnover (ubiquitinylation) Modulation of electric field gradients in membranes for energy production, electrolyte balance and electric nerve current and muscle tonic contraction x x x Vector function Carrier of chemical pollutants Gagné, F., Gagnon, C., Blaise, C. (2008) Aquatic Nanotoxicology: a review. Research Trends: current topics in toxicology, In press. 1) Bioreactivity of CdTe quantum dots in rainbow trout liver extracts P Parameter t R t off change/hour Rate h /h S12 S12, NADPH S12 CdTe S12, CdTe, Ob Observations ti NADPH S12, CdTe, MT S12, CdTe, H2O2/ Per NAD(P)H - 0.002 -5.7 0.10 5.1 -0.07 0.091 CdTe blocks the oxidation of NAD(P)H and this is reversed by the addition of MT and addition of H2O2 Qdot fluorescence 0 0 -1.6 -1.9 -2.12 -1.53 The addition of S12 decreases Qdot fluorescence where the drop is enhanced by MT and lowered by H2O2 Labile zinc 0.0002 0.046 - 0.18 - 0.15 -0.091 -0.032 The addition of CdTe decreases labile zinc and this is hindered by MT > H2O2 > NADPH Experiment conditions: S12 proteins: 250 ug/mL; NADPH: 100 uM; MT: 10 ug/mL; H2O2: 100 uM; peroxidase (100 ug/mL) Incubation temperature: 15oC Change in surface charge density CdTe are semisemi-conductors M+ Electron dense NADP+ « Filled » holes NADPH Electronic holes M+ Metal mobilization The presence of electronic holes on the surface enables to trap external charges and reduce radiative emission intensity (indeed, a drop of green fluorescence was observed) 2) Change in heavy metals metabolism, oxidative stress, DNA damage and heat shock proteins by QD exposed to rainbow trout hepatocytes Discriminant analysis of QD cytotoxicity effects in rainbow trout hepatocyte hepatocyte. 5 4 Root 2 (DNA>Hsp7 72>MT) 3 2 * 1 * 0 * -1 * -2 0.4 2 10 50 250 Control Cd2+ * * -3 -4 4 -8 * -6 -4 -2 0 2 4 6 8 Root 1 (Via>MT>Zn/Cd) Discriminant analyses were performed on CdTe QD. The effect endpoints in parentheses are the principal components of the axis. The cumulative variance explained 95% respectively. Asterisks (*) indicate the centre of gravity of each treatment group. Evidence of toxic steric interactions (size related effects). 3) Toxicogenomics of CdTe in rainbow trout (96h exposure): analysis in the liver. CdTe (colloidal) 50 genes -Vtg (!) - Vn envelop p - Dop D2 receptor - CYP1A2 - C4 gene - chemokine receptor - Glu DHase - Gln Gl synthase h - cystatin C - cathepsin L - ubiquitin … CdSO4 (dissolved) 8 g genes -MT 1A - actin - Apolipoprot - Cyt. c oxidase - CYP2K1, 3A27 …. 17 genes -COX (prostaglandin) - cathepsin p D - DNA exotransferase - cystatin C …. 1) Over the 207 genes analyzed, 21 % of them were affected by CdTe while 6 % were influenced by dissolved Cd; 2) CdTe produced a larger spectrum of effects than dissolved Cd Cd, 12 % of the expressed genes were expressed by both colloidal and molecular Cd; 3) The QD was able to induced Vtg and vitellin coat suggested an endocrine disrupting activity; 4) The inflammatory properties was evident for dissolved Cd in the liver. F t Future perspectives ti 1) Preliminary data on NM solubility suggest that they tend to aggregate and should favor the sediment compartment over the water compartments - organic matter or other matrix effects could change the equilibrium… - ingestion through feeding should also be considered; 2) The NM are expected to degrade in the environment and are biologically reactive; 3) The toxic effects of NM are not only related to its chemical constituents but to the size, shape and surface properties as well; 4) For CdTe QDs, they were cytotoxic and induced protein chaperones (first biomarkers for field monitoring studies ?); Moreover, the responses pattern were not always related to free cadmium ions; 5) Toxicogenomic analysis revealed that colloidal CdTe revealed a different pattern of gene expression than dissolved Cd. Moreover, CdTe was able to induce the expression vitellogenin (a biomarker for estrogenic effects), however the mechanism remains to be elucidated. elucidated Are NMs potential endocrine disrupters ? L’équipe EC du programme Impacts environnementaux en nanotechnologie 1) Chimie colloïdale environnementale (nanochimie aquatique) Christian Gagnon (Spéciation de la nanotechnologie) Patrice Turcotte: chimie des colloïdes 2) Nanotoxicologie Aquatique (microbioessais et biomarqueurs) Christian Blaise (microbioessais) Philippe Eullafroy (Phyto-toxicologie) Joelle Auclair (Biomarqueurs physiologiques) Kimberly Bull (Toxicogénomique) Thank you ! Publications in nanotoxicology: 1) Gagné, F., Auclair, J., Turcotte, P., Fournier, M., Gagnon, C., Sauvé, S., Blaise, C. (2008) Ecotoxicity of CdTe quantum dots to freshwater mussels: Impacts on immune system, oxidative stress and genotoxicity.Aquatic Toxicol. 86, 333-340. 2) Blaise, C., Gagné, F., Férard, J.F., Eullafroy, P. (2008) Ecotoxicity of selected nano nano-materials materials to aquatic organisms. Environ Toxicol., In press. 3) Gagné, F., Maysinger, D., André, C., Blaise, C. (2008) Cytotoxicity of aged cadmium-telluride quantum dots to rainbow trout hepatocytes. Nanotoxicology, In press. 4) Gagné, F., Gagnon, C., Blaise, C. (2008) Aquatic Nanotoxicology: a review. Research Trends: current topics in toxicology, In press. 5)) Santos, M.A., Monteiro, R. T. R., C. Blaise, F. Gagné, g Bull, K.2008. Influence of sediment g grain size on elutriate toxicity of inorganic nano-materials. Water Res. J. Canada, Submitted. 6) Gagné, F., Auclair, J., Turcotte, P., Gagnon, C. (2008). Bioreactivity and sublethal effects of CdTe quantum dots to rainbow trout hepatocytes.Comp. Biochem Physiol, In preparation. 7) Peyrot, C., Gagnon, C., Gagné, F., Willkinson, K.J., Turcotte, P., Sauvé, S. 2008 Effects of cadmium telluride quantum dots upon the bioaccumulation of cadmium and the methallothionein production of the freshwater mussels Elliptio complanata. Environ Toxicol. Chem., In preparation.
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