Didem Ag Seleci
Determining nanoform similarity via assessment of surface reactivity by abiotic and in vitro assays
Ag Seleci, Didem; Tsiliki, Georgia; Werle, Kai; Elam, Derek A.; Okpowe, Omena; Seidel, Karsten; Bi, Xiangyu; Westerhoff, Paul; Innes, Emma; Boyles, Matthew; Miller, Mark; Giusti, Anna; Murphy, Fiona; Haase, Andrea; Stone, Vicki; Wohlleben, Wendel
Authors
Georgia Tsiliki
Kai Werle
Derek A. Elam
Omena Okpowe
Karsten Seidel
Xiangyu Bi
Paul Westerhoff
Emma Innes
Dr Matthew Boyles M.Boyles2@napier.ac.uk
Lecturer
Mark Miller
Anna Giusti
Fiona Murphy
Andrea Haase
Vicki Stone
Wendel Wohlleben
Abstract
Grouping of substances is a method used to streamline hazard and risk assessment. Assessment of similarity provides the scientific evidence needed for formation of groups. This work reports on justification of grouping of nanoforms (NFs) via similarity of their surface reactivity. Four reactivity assays were used for concentration dependent detection of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by NFs: abiotic assays FRAS, EPR and DCFH2-DA, as well as the in vitro assay of NRF2/ARE responsive luciferase reporter activation in the HEK293 cell line. Representative materials (CuO, Mn2O3, BaSO4, CeO2 and ZnO) and three case studies of each several NFs of iron oxides, Diketopyrrolopyrroles (DPP)-based organic pigments and silicas were assessed. A novel similarity assessment algorithm was applied to quantify similarities between pairs of NFs, in a four-step workflow on concentration-response curves, individual concentration and response ranges, and finally the representative materials. We found this algorithm to be applicable to all abiotic and in vitro assays that were tested. Justification of grouping must include the increased potency of smaller particles via the scaling of effects with specific surface, and hence quantitative similarity analysis was performed on concentration-response in mass-metrics. CuO and BaSO4 were the most and least reactive representative materials respectively, and all assays found BaSO4/CuO not similar, as confirmed by their different NOAECs of in vivo studies. However, similarity outcomes from different reactivity assays were not always in agreement, highlighting the need to generate data by one assay for the representative materials and the candidate group of NFs. Despite low similarity scores in vitro some pairs of case study NFs can be accepted as sufficiently similar because the in vivo NOAECs are similar, highlighting the conservative assessment by the abiotic assays.
Citation
Ag Seleci, D., Tsiliki, G., Werle, K., Elam, D. A., Okpowe, O., Seidel, K., Bi, X., Westerhoff, P., Innes, E., Boyles, M., Miller, M., Giusti, A., Murphy, F., Haase, A., Stone, V., & Wohlleben, W. (2022). Determining nanoform similarity via assessment of surface reactivity by abiotic and in vitro assays. NanoImpact, 26, Article 100390. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.impact.2022.100390
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Feb 2, 2022 |
Online Publication Date | Feb 7, 2022 |
Publication Date | 2022-04 |
Deposit Date | Oct 13, 2023 |
Publicly Available Date | Oct 13, 2023 |
Print ISSN | 2452-0748 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 26 |
Article Number | 100390 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.impact.2022.100390 |
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Determining nanoform similarity via assessment of surface reactivity by abiotic and in vitro assays
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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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