Toxicological Comparison
between Gold Nanoparticles
in Different Shapes: Nanospheres Exhibit Less Hepatotoxicity and Lipid
Dysfunction and Nanotriangles Show Lower Neurotoxicity
posted on 2024-10-09, 19:43authored byLan Zhang, Yuyang Ma, Zhiliang Wei, Qian Li
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in different shapes have been
developed
and investigated for the treatment of various diseases. However, the
potential toxicological vulnerability of different organs to morphologies
of AuNPs and the complication of the toxicological profile of AuNPs
by other health risk factors (e.g., plastic particles) have rarely
been investigated systematically. Therefore, in this study, we aimed
to investigate the toxicological differences between the spherical
and triangular AuNPs (denoted as AuS and AuT, respectively) and the
toxicological modulations by micro- or nanosized polystyrene plastic
particles (denoted as mPS and nPS, respectively) in mice. Systemic
biochemical characterizations were performed after a 90 day oral gavage
feeding to obtain toxicological comparisons in different organs. In
the case of single exposure to gold nanoparticles, AuT was associated
with significantly higher aspartate amino-transferase (168.2%, P < 0.05), superoxide dismutase (183.6%, P < 0.001), catalase (136.9%, P < 0.01), total
cholesterol (132.6%, P < 0.01), high-density lipoprotein
cholesterol (131.3%, P < 0.05), and low-density
lipoprotein cholesterol (204.6%, P < 0.01) levels
than AuS. In contrast, AuS was associated with a significantly higher
nitric oxide level (355.1%, P < 0.01) than AuT.
Considering the overall toxicological profiles in single exposure
and coexposure with multiscale plastics, it has been found that AuS
is associated with lower hepatotoxicity and lipid metabolism malfunction,
and AuT is associated with lower neurotoxicity than AuS. This finding
may facilitate the future therapeutic design by considering the priority
in protections of different organs and utilizing appropriate material
morphologies.