Vodyanoy Vitaly, Daniels Yasmine, Pustovyy Oleg, MacCrehan William A, Muramoto Shin, Stan Gheorghe
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology, Auburn University College of Veterinary Medicine, Auburn, AL, USA.
Material Measurement Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MA, USA.
Int J Nanomedicine. 2016 Apr 18;11:1567-76. doi: 10.2147/IJN.S101463. eCollection 2016.
Small metal nanoparticles obtained from animal blood were observed to be toxic to cultured cancer cells, whereas noncancerous cells were much less affected. In this work, engineered zinc and copper metal nanoparticles were produced from bulk metal rods by an underwater high-voltage discharge method. The metal nanoparticles were characterized by atomic force microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The metal nanoparticles, with estimated diameters of 1 nm-2 nm, were determined to be more than 85% nonoxidized. A cell viability assay and high-resolution light microscopy showed that exposure of RG2, cultured rat brain glioma cancer cells, to the zinc and copper nanoparticles resulted in cell morphological changes, including decreased cell adherence, shrinking/rounding, nuclear condensation, and budding from cell bodies. The metal-induced cell injuries were similar to the effects of staurosporine, an active apoptotic reagent. The viability experiments conducted for zinc and copper yielded values of dissociation constants of 0.22 ± 0.08 nmol/L (standard error [SE]) and 0.12 ± 0.02 nmol/L (SE), respectively. The noncancerous astrocytes were not affected at the same conditions. Because metal nanoparticles were lethal to the cancer cells at sub-nanomolar concentrations, they are potentially important as nanomedicine.
Lethal concentrations of synthetic metal nanoparticles reported in the literature are a few orders of magnitude higher than the natural, blood-isolated metal nanoparticles; therefore, in this work, engineered metal nanoparticles were examined to mimic the properties of endogenous metal nanoparticles.
RG2, rat brain glioma cells CTX TNA2 brain rat astrocytes, obtained from the American Type Culture Collection, high-voltage discharge, atomic force microscope, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, high-resolution light microscopy, zeta potential measurements, and 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay were used in this work.
Engineered zinc and copper metal nanoparticles of size 1 nm-2 nm were lethal to cultured RG2 glioma cancer cells. Cell death was confirmed by MTT assay, showing that the relative viability of RG2 glioma cells is reduced in a dose-dependent manner at sub-nanomolar concentrations of the nanoparticles. The noncancerous astrocytes were not affected at the same conditions.
The engineered and characterized zinc and copper nanoparticles are potentially significant as biomedicine.
从动物血液中获得的小金属纳米颗粒对培养的癌细胞具有毒性,而非癌细胞受影响较小。在这项研究中,通过水下高压放电法从块状金属棒制备了工程化的锌和铜金属纳米颗粒。通过原子力显微镜和X射线光电子能谱对金属纳米颗粒进行了表征。估计直径为1纳米至2纳米的金属纳米颗粒被确定为超过85%未被氧化。细胞活力测定和高分辨率光学显微镜显示,将培养的大鼠脑胶质瘤癌细胞RG2暴露于锌和铜纳米颗粒会导致细胞形态变化,包括细胞黏附减少、收缩/变圆、核浓缩以及从细胞体出芽。金属诱导的细胞损伤类似于活性凋亡试剂星形孢菌素的作用。对锌和铜进行的活力实验得出解离常数的值分别为0.22±0.08纳摩尔/升(标准误差[SE])和0.12±0.02纳摩尔/升(SE)。在相同条件下,非癌性星形胶质细胞未受影响。由于金属纳米颗粒在亚纳摩尔浓度下对癌细胞具有致死性,它们作为纳米药物具有潜在的重要性。
文献报道的合成金属纳米颗粒的致死浓度比天然的、从血液中分离的金属纳米颗粒高几个数量级;因此,在这项研究中,对工程化金属纳米颗粒进行了研究,以模拟内源性金属纳米颗粒的特性。
本研究使用了从美国典型培养物保藏中心获得的大鼠脑胶质瘤细胞RG2、大鼠脑星形胶质细胞CTX TNA2、高压放电、原子力显微镜、X射线光电子能谱、高分辨率光学显微镜、zeta电位测量以及3 - [4,5 - 二甲基噻唑 - 2 - 基] - 2,5 - 二苯基四氮唑溴盐(MTT)测定。
尺寸为1纳米至2纳米的工程化锌和铜金属纳米颗粒对培养的RG2胶质瘤癌细胞具有致死性。MTT测定证实了细胞死亡,表明在纳米颗粒的亚纳摩尔浓度下,RG2胶质瘤细胞的相对活力以剂量依赖的方式降低。在相同条件下,非癌性星形胶质细胞未受影响。
经工程化和表征的锌和铜纳米颗粒作为生物医学具有潜在的重要意义。