Advances in nanotechnology provide opportunities for the prevention and
treatment of periodontal disease. While physicochemical properties of Ag
containing nanoparticles (NPs) are known to influence the magnitude of their
toxicity, it is thought that nanosilver can be made less toxic to eukaryotes by
passivation of the NPs with a benign metal. Moreover, the addition of other
noble metals to silver nanoparticles, in the alloy formulation, is known to
alter the silver dissolution behavior. Thus, we synthesized glutathione capped
Ag/Au alloy bimetallic nanoparticles (NPs) via the galvanic
replacement reaction between maltose coated Ag NPs and chloroauric acid
(HAuCl4) in 5% aqueous triblock F127 copolymer solution. We then
compared the antibacterial activity of the Ag/Au NPs to pure Ag NPs on
Porphyromonas gingivalis W83, a key pathogen in the
development of periodontal disease. Only partially oxidized glutathione capped
Ag and Ag/Au (Au:Ag≈0.2) NPs inhibited the planktonic growth of
P. gingivalis W83. This effect was enhanced in the presence
of hydrogen peroxide, which simulates the oxidative stress environment in the
periodontal pocket during chronic inflammation.
Mercury contamination in aquatic systems poses a serious environmental stress to phototrophic plankton. We used Euglena gracilis to gain an understanding of the physiochemical changes resulting from mercury stress across the transcriptome and metabolome. Using a combination of Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS) and RNA-sequencing, we identified metabolomic and transcriptomic changes both within and outside cellular space after mercury exposure. Metabolic profiles of E. gracilis were less diverse after mercury exposure, highlighting an overall refinement of metabolites produced. Significant fold changes in cysteine, glutathione, and amino acid-based metabolites were significantly higher (p < 0.05) within the mercury exposed cells and in extracellular space than in untreated cultures. Using integrated omics analyses, a significant upregulation of transcripts and metabolites involved in amino acid synthesis, cellular responses to chemical stress, reactive oxygen species detoxification, and electron transport were identified. Together the enrichment of these pathways highlights mechanisms that E. gracilis harness to mitigate oxidative stress at sublethal concentrations of mercury exposure and give rise to new biomarkers of environmental stress in the widely distributed E. gracilis.
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