Daily used nanoparticles increases the incidence of cancer presented by Hanan Ramadan Hamad Mohamed...

Preview:

Citation preview

Daily used nanoparticles increases

the incidence of cancerpresented by

Hanan Ramadan Hamad Mohamed

Zoology Department Faculty of Science

Cairo University

Nanoparticles

• Nanoparticles are the substances with size less than 100 nm, that making thier physical properties differe from those of their bulk material.

• Because of their unique size dependent physical and chemical properties, witnessed unprecedented growth in nanoparticles applications occurred.

• Now nanoparticles are now commercially available for industrial, medical and biological applications.

• All these applications potentially increased daily human exposure to nanoparticles and increased their risks

Titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles

• TiO2 nanoparticles have been widely used in a wide

variety of applications due to their high stability,

resistance, and photocatalytic properties.

• It is used in a variety of consumer products (e.g.,

toothpastes, sunscreens, cosmetics, food products),

paints and pharmaceuticals, e.g. ultraviolet blockers,

medications, and wastewater treatment.

Nano-TiO2 toxicity• These intensive uses of nano-TiO2 potentially increase

daily human exposure to them and increasing their risks.• To date, several studies have evidenced nano-TiO2

induced pulmonary inflammation, neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, oxidative stress and distal organ involvement upon exposure to them (Zhou et al., 2003, stone et al., 2007 and Wang et al., 2007).

• Even nano-TiO2 induced genotoxicity and mutagenicity have been shown using different experimental systems (Rahman et al., 2002; Sadeghiani et al., 2005 and Kisin et al., 2007).

• But the question now whether these nano-TiO2 particles are removed or persisted in the tissue.

Aim of work

Therefore this study was designed to investigate the bio-persistence of nano-TiO2 in mice tissue and its risks on cancer incidence

1-TiO2 characterization

2- Titanium content

3-DNA damage induction using comet assay

Using quantitative DNA fragmentation

Laddered DNA fragmentation assay

4-SSCP analysis for p53 gene mutations

SSCP analysis

5-Histological examination

Leucocytic infiltrationsLo

ss m

embr

ane

perm

eabi

lity

Necrosis

ROS

Increase cancer incidence

Conclusion • Retention of orally administrated nano-TiO2 in up to at

least 2 weeks after stopping its administration

• Potentiation of nano-TiO2 toxicity was evidenced by gradual dose- and time-dependent apoptotic DNA damage, histopathological changes, and oxidative stress inductions in mice gastric cells.

• Indeed, dose- and time-dependent mutation induction in the p53 gene revealed that nano-TiO2 induced apoptosis is a p53 mediated process.

• Therefore, administration of even low nano-TiO2 doses is accumulative due to its persisted accumulation therapy increases the incidence of cancer

Recommended