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The impact of aminated surface ligands and silica shells on the stability, uptake, and toxicity of engineered silver nanoparticles

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Title The impact of aminated surface ligands and silica shells on the stability, uptake, and toxicity of engineered silver nanoparticles
Names Bonventre, Josephine A. (creator)
Pryor, Joseph B. (creator)
Harper, Bryan J. (creator)
Harper, Stacey L. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-12 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by Springer. The published article can be found at: http://link.springer.com/journal/11051.
Abstract Inherent nanomaterial characteristics, composition,
surface chemistry, and primary particle size,
are known to impact particle stability, uptake, and
toxicity. Nanocomposites challenge our ability to predict
nanoparticle reactivity in biological systems if they
are composed of materials with contrasting relative
toxicities. We hypothesized that toxicity would be
dominated by the nanoparticle surface (shell vs core),
and that modulating the surface ligands would have a
direct impact on uptake. We exposed developing
zebrafish (Danio rerio) to a series of ~70 nm amine-terminated
silver nanoparticles with silica shells (AgSi
NPs) to investigate the relative influence of surface
amination, composition, and size on toxicity. Like-sized
aminated AgSi and Si NPs were more toxic than paired
hydroxyl-terminated nanoparticles; however, both AgSi
NPs were more toxic than the Si NPs, indicating a
significant contribution of the silver core to the toxicity.
Incremental increases in surface amination did not
linearly increase uptake and toxicity, but did have a
marked impact on dispersion stability. Mass-based
exposure metrics initially supported the hypothesis that
smaller nanoparticles (20 nm) would be more toxic than
larger particles (70 nm). However, surface area-based
metrics revealed that toxicity was independent of size.
Our studies suggest that nanoparticle surfaces play a
critical role in the uptake and toxicity of AgSi NPs,
while the impact of size may be a function of the
exposure metric used. Overall, uptake and toxicity can
be dramatically altered by small changes in surface
functionalization or exposure media. Only after understanding
the magnitude of these changes, can we begin
to understand the biologically available dose following
nanoparticle exposure.
Genre Article
Topic Nanomaterials
Identifier Bonventre, J. A., Pryor, J. B., Harper, B. J., & Harper, S. L. (2014). The impact of aminated surface ligands and silica shells on the stability, uptake, and toxicity of engineered silver nanoparticles. Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 16(12), 2761. doi:10.1007/s11051-014-2761-z

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