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Silver Nanoparticles Incite Size- and Dose-Dependent Developmental Phenotypes and Nanotoxicity in Zebrafish Embryos
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Silver Nanoparticles Incite Size- and Dose-Dependent Developmental Phenotypes and Nanotoxicity in Zebrafish Embryos

Lauren M. Browning, Kerry J. Lee, Prakash D. Nallathamby and Xiao-Hong Nancy Xu
Chemical research in toxicology, Vol.26(10), pp.1503-1513
10-01-2013
PMCID: PMC3819400
PMID: 24024906

Abstract

Chemistry Chemistry, Medicinal Chemistry, Multidisciplinary Life Sciences & Biomedicine Pharmacology & Pharmacy Physical Sciences Science & Technology Toxicology
Nanomaterials possess distinctive physicochemical properties and promise a wide range of applications, from advanced technology to leading-edge medicine. However, their effects on living organisms remain largely unknown. Here we report that the purified silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) (97 +/- 13 nm) incite specific developmental stage embryonic phenotypes and nanotoxicity in a dose-dependent manner, upon acute exposure of given stage embryos to the NPs (0-24 pM) for only 2 h. The critical concentrations of the NPs that cause 50% of embryos to develop normally for cleavage, early gastrula, early segmentation, late segmentation, and hatching stage zebrafish embryos are 3.5, 4, 6, 6, and 8 pM, respectively, showing that the earlier developmental stage embryos are much more sensitive to the effects of the NPs than the later stage embryos. Interestingly, distinctive phenotypes (head abnormality and no eyes) are observed only in cleavage and early gastrula stage embryos treated with the NPs, showing the stage-specific effects of the NPs. By comparing these Ag NPs with smaller Ag NPs (13.1 +/- 2.5 nm), we found that the embryonic phenotypes strikingly depend upon the sizes of Ag NPs and embryonic developmental stages. These notable findings suggest that the Ag NPs are unlike any conventional chemicals or ions. They can potentially enable target-specific study and therapy for early embryonic development in size-, stage-, dose-, and exposure duration-dependent manners.
url
https://doi.org/10.1021/tx400228pView
Published (Version of record) Open

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