Cationic Polystyrene Nanosphere Toxicity Depends on Cell-Specific Endocytic and Mitochondrial Injury Pathways
University of California, Los Angeles · California NanoSystems Institute · +1 more institution
Abstract
The exponential increase in the number of new nanomaterials that are being produced increases the likelihood of adverse biological effects in humans and the environment. In this study we compared the effects of cationic nanoparticles in five different cell lines that represent portal-of-entry or systemic cellular targets for engineered nanoparticles. Although 60 nm NH(2)-labeled polystyrene (PS) nanospheres were highly toxic in macrophage (RAW 264.7) and epithelial (BEAS-2B) cells, human microvascular endothelial (HMEC), hepatoma (HEPA-1), and pheochromocytoma (PC-12) cells were relatively resistant to particle injury. While the death pathway in RAW 264.7 cells involves caspase activation, the cytotoxic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 6.05
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Cytotoxicity
- Endocytosis
- Biophysics
- Nanotoxicology
- Cell biology
- Chemistry
- Toxicity
- Programmed cell death