Remediation of Metal Oxide Nanotoxicity with a Functional Amyloid

Author:

Wang Yue12,Liang Xiufang12,Andrikopoulos Nicholas23ORCID,Tang Huayuan45,He Fei6,Yin Xiang6,Li Yuhuan37,Ding Feng5ORCID,Peng Guotao6ORCID,Mortimer Monika8ORCID,Ke Pu Chun23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Sciences and Engineering Guangzhou International Campus South China University of Technology Guangzhou 510006 China

2. Nanomedicine Center Great Bay Area National Institute for Nanotechnology Innovation 136 Kaiyuan Avenue Guangzhou 510700 China

3. Drug Delivery Disposition and Dynamics Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences Monash University 381 Royal Parade Parkville VIC 3052 Australia

4. Department of Engineering Mechanics Hohai University Nanjing 211100 China

5. Department of Physics and Astronomy Clemson University Clemson SC 29634 USA

6. College of Environmental Science and Engineering Key Laboratory of Yangtze River Water Environment Tongji University 1239 Siping Road Shanghai 200092 China

7. Liver Cancer Institute Zhongshan Hospital Key Laboratory of Carcinogenesis and Cancer Invasion Ministry of Education Fudan University Shanghai 200032 China

8. Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology National Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics Akadeemia tee 23 Tallinn 12618 Estonia

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the environmental health and safety of nanomaterials (NanoEHS) is essential for the sustained development of nanotechnology. Although extensive research over the past two decades has elucidated the phenomena, mechanisms, and implications of nanomaterials in cellular and organismal models, the active remediation of the adverse biological and environmental effects of nanomaterials remains largely unexplored. Inspired by recent developments in functional amyloids for biomedical and environmental engineering, this work shows their new utility as metallothionein mimics in the strategically important area of NanoEHS. Specifically, metal ions released from CuO and ZnO nanoparticles are sequestered through cysteine coordination and electrostatic interactions with beta‐lactoglobulin (bLg) amyloid, as revealed by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and molecular dynamics simulations. The toxicity of the metal oxide nanoparticles is subsequently mitigated by functional amyloids, as validated by cell viability and apoptosis assays in vitro and murine survival and biomarker assays in vivo. As bLg amyloid fibrils can be readily produced from whey in large quantities at a low cost, the study offers a crucial strategy for remediating the biological and environmental footprints of transition metal oxide nanomaterials.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Eesti Teadusagentuur

Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

Key Technologies Research and Development Program

Publisher

Wiley

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