4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

High throughput kinetic Vibrio fischeri bioluminescence inhibition assay for study of toxic effects of nanoparticles

Journal

TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO
Volume 22, Issue 5, Pages 1412-1417

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tiv.2008.02.011

Keywords

Flash Assay; microplate luminometer; Vibrio fischeri; nanoparticles; heavy metals; PEI; PAMAM dendrimers

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Despite of the growing production and use of nanoparticles (NPs) in various applications, current regulations, including EC new chemical policy REACH, fail to address the environmental, health, and safety risks posed by NPs. This paper shows that kinetic Vibrio fischeri luminescence inhibition test - Flash Assay - that up to now was mainly used for toxicity analysis of solid and colored environmental samples (e.g. sediments, soil suspensions), is a powerful tool for screening the toxic properties of NPs. To demonstrate that Flash Assay (initially designed for a tube luminometer) can also be adapted to a microplate format for high throughput toxicity screening of NPs, altogether 11 chemicals were comparatively analyzed. The studied chemicals included bulk and nanosized CuO and ZnO, polyethylenimine (PEI) and polyamidoamine dendrimer generations 2 and 5 (PAMAM G2 and G5). The results showed that EC50 values of 30-min Flash Assay in tube and microplate formats were practically similar and correlated very well (log - logR(2) = 0.98), classifying all analyzed chemicals, except nano CuO (that was more toxic in cuvette format), analogously when compared to the risk phrases of the EC Directive 93/67/EEC for ranking toxicity of chemicals for aquatic organisms. The 30-min EC50 values of nanoscale organic cationic polymers (PEI and dendrimers) ranged from 215 to 775 mg/l. Thirty-minute EC50 values of metal oxides varied largely, ranging from similar to 4 mg/l (bulk and nano ZnO) to similar to 100 mg/l (nano CuO) and similar to 4000 mg/l (bulk CuO). Thus, considering an excellent correlation between both for-mats, 96-well microplate Flash Assay can be successfully used for high throughput evaluation of harmful properties of chemicals (including organic and inorganic NPs) to bacteria. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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