4.7 Article

Preparation, characterization, and in vitro dosimetry of dispersed, engineered nanomaterials

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 355-371

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2016.172

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Funding

  1. Harvard-National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Nanosafety Center grant [1U24ES026946]
  2. National Science Foundation [1436450]

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Evidence continues to grow of the importance of in vitro and in vivo dosimetry in the hazard assessment and ranking of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs). Accurate dose metrics are particularly important for in vitro cellular screening to assess the potential health risks or bioactivity of ENMs. To ensure meaningful and reproducible quantification of in vitro dose, with consistent measurement and reporting between laboratories, it is necessary to adopt standardized and integrated methodologies for (i) generation of stable ENM suspensions in cell culture media; (ii) colloidal characterization of suspended ENMs, particularly of properties that determine particle kinetics in an in vitro system (size distribution and formed agglomerate effective density); and (iii) robust numerical fate and transport modeling for accurate determination of the ENM dose delivered to cells over the course of the in vitro exposure. Here we present an integrated comprehensive protocol based on such a methodology for in vitro dosimetry, including detailed standardized procedures for each of these three critical aims. The entire protocol requires similar to 6-12 h to complete.

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