Long-Term Accumulation, Biological Effects and Toxicity of BSA-Coated Gold Nanoparticles in the Mouse Liver, Spleen, and Kidneys
Cancer Research Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences · Biomedical Research Center of the Slovak Academy of Sciences · +7 more institutions
Abstract
Gold nanoparticles are promising candidates as vehicles for drug delivery systems and could be developed into effective anticancer treatments. However, concerns about their safety need to be identified, addressed, and satisfactorily answered. Although gold nanoparticles are considered biocompatible and nontoxic, most of the toxicology evidence originates from in vitro studies, which may not reflect the responses in complex living organisms.
We used an animal model to study the long-term effects of 20 nm spherical AuNPs coated with bovine serum albumin. Mice received a 1 mg/kg single intravenous dose of nanoparticles, and the biodistribution and accumulation, as well as the organ changes caused by the nanoparticles, were characterized in the liver, spleen, and kidneys during 120 days.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
15- KJKristína JakičCorresponding
Cancer Research Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Biomedical Research Center of the Slovak Academy of Sciences
- MŠMichal Šelc
Slovak Academy of Sciences, Cancer Research Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Centre for Advanced Material Application of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, Biomedical Research Center of the Slovak Academy of Sciences
- FRFilip Rázga
- VNVeronika Némethová
- PMPetra Mazancová
Topics & keywords
- Spleen
- Toxicity
- Kidney
- Nanoparticle
- Pharmacology
- Chemistry
- Medicine
- Materials science