Intracellular trafficking pathways in silver nanoparticle uptake and toxicity in Caenorhabditis elegans

TitleIntracellular trafficking pathways in silver nanoparticle uptake and toxicity in Caenorhabditis elegans
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsMaurer, LL, Yang, X, Schindler, AJ, Taggart, RK, Jiang, C, Hsu-Kim, H, Sherwood, DR, Meyer, JN
JournalNanotoxicology
Volume10
Issue7
Pagination831 - 835
Date Published08/2016
ISSN1743-5390
Abstract

We used the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to study the roles of endocytosis and lysosomal function in uptake and subsequent toxicity of silver nanoparticles (AgNP) in vivo. To focus on AgNP uptake and effects rather than silver ion (AgNO3) effects, we used a minimally dissolvable AgNP, citrate-coated AgNPs (CIT-AgNPs). We found that the clathrin-mediated endocytosis inhibitor chlorpromazine reduced the toxicity of CIT-AgNPs but not AgNO3. We also tested the sensitivity of three endocytosis-deficient mutants (rme-1, rme-6 and rme-8) and two lysosomal function deficient mutants (cup-5 and glo-1) as compared to wild-type (N2 strain). One of the endocytosis-deficient mutants (rme-6) took up less silver and was resistant to the acute toxicity of CIT-AgNPs compared to N2s. None of those mutants showed altered sensitivity to AgNO3. Lysosome and lysosome-related organelle mutants were more sensitive to the growth-inhibiting effects of both CIT-AgNPs and AgNO3. Our study provides mechanistic evidence suggesting that early endosome formation is necessary for AgNP-induced toxicity in vivo, as rme-6 mutants were less sensitive to the toxic effects of AgNPs than C. elegans with mutations involved in later steps in the endocytic process.

URLhttp://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.3109/17435390.2015.1110759
DOI10.3109/17435390.2015.1110759
Short TitleNanotoxicology