The increasing use of nanomaterials has raised concerns about their potential risks to human health. Recent studies have shown that nanoparticles can cross the placenta barrier in pregnant mice and cause neurotoxicity in their offspring, but a more detailed understanding of the effects of nanoparticles on pregnant animals remains elusive. Here, we show that silica and titanium dioxide nanoparticles with diameters of 70 nm and 35 nm, respectively, can cause pregnancy complications when injected intravenously into pregnant mice. The silica and titanium dioxide nanoparticles were found in the placenta, fetal liver and fetal brain. Mice treated with these nanoparticles had smaller uteri and smaller fetuses than untreated controls. Fullerene molecules and larger (300 and 1,000 nm) silica particles did not induce these complications. These detrimental effects are linked to structural and functional abnormalities in the placenta on the maternal side, and are abolished when the surfaces of the silica nanoparticles are modified with carboxyl and amine groups.
Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been one of the most extensively researched and developed nanomaterials. However, little concern has been placed on their safety. The biological effects of CNTs are believed to differ relative to size and shape. Thus, the relationship between the characteristics of CNTs and their safety needs to be evaluated. In this study, we examined the biological effects of different-sized multi-walled CNTs (MWCNTs) and single-walled CNTs (SWCNTs). Long and thick MWCNTs induced the strongest DNA damage while similar SWCNTs caused little effect. Comparison of inflammatory responses of various types of CNTs found that peritoneal CNT administration of long and thick MWCNTs increased the total cell number in abdominal lavage fluid in mice. These results indicate that long and thick MWCNT, but not short and thin MWCNT, cause DNA damage and severe inflammatory effects. These findings might provide useful information for constructing novel CNTs with safety.
Intestinal nematode infection induces marked goblet cell hyperplasia and mucus secretion, but the mechanisms of regulation of the changes still remain to be elucidated. In the present study, epithelial cells were isolated from the rat small intestine at various times after Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infection, and the levels of expression of goblet cell- and mucin glycosylation-related genes were estimated by semi-quantitative reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. Among the genes investigated, mucin core peptide (MUC) 2, sialyltransferase (Siat) 4c and trefoil factor family (TFF) 3 were upregulated as early as 2-4 days post-infection, suggesting that they are associated with an early innate protective response. Seven days post-infection and thereafter, when the nematodes reached maturity, significant upregulation of MUC3, MUC4, resistin-like molecule beta (Relmbeta) and 3O-sulfotransferase (3ST)1 was observed, while 3ST2 expression levels increased after the majority of the worms were expelled from the intestine. Similar alterations of glycosylation-related gene expression were also observed in mast-cell-deficient Ws/Ws rats, suggesting that mast cells in the epithelium are not relevant to the upregulation of these genes. The present finding that the expression level of each goblet cell- or glycosylation-related gene was altered differently during the time course of infection indicates the progression of sequential qualitative changes in the mucus layer after infection.
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