Author:
Vogt Annika,Rancan Fiorenza,Ahlberg Sebastian,Nazemi Berouz,Choe Chun Sik,Darvin Maxim E,Hadam Sabrina,Blume-Peytavi Ulrike,Loza Kateryna,Diendorf Jörg,Epple Matthias,Graf Christina,Rühl Eckart,Meinke Martina C,Lademann Jürgen
Abstract
The investigation of nanoparticle interactions with tissues is complex. High levels of standardization, ideally testing of different material types in the same biological model, and combinations of sensitive imaging and detection methods are required. Here, we present our studies on nanoparticle interactions with skin, skin cells, and biological media. Silica, titanium dioxide and silver particles were chosen as representative examples for different types of skin exposure to nanomaterials, e.g., unintended environmental exposure (silica) versus intended exposure through application of sunscreen (titanium dioxide) or antiseptics (silver). Because each particle type exhibits specific physicochemical properties, we were able to apply different combinations of methods to examine skin penetration and cellular uptake, including optical microscopy, electron microscopy, X-ray microscopy on cells and tissue sections, flow cytometry of isolated skin cells as well as Raman microscopy on whole tissue blocks. In order to assess the biological relevance of such findings, cell viability and free radical production were monitored on cells and in whole tissue samples. The combination of technologies and the joint discussion of results enabled us to look at nanoparticle–skin interactions and the biological relevance of our findings from different angles.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,General Physics and Astronomy,General Materials Science
Cited by
57 articles.
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