Silver nanoparticles induce formation of multi-protein aggregates that contain cadherin but do not colocalize with nanoparticles

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are increasingly incorporated in diverse products to confer antimicrobial properties. They are released into the environment during manufacture, after disposal, and from the products during use. Because AgNPs bioaccumulate in brain, it is important to understand how they...

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Veröffentlicht in:Toxicology in vitro 2024-06, Vol.98, p.105837-105837, Article 105837
Hauptverfasser: Thomas, Kaden M., Spitzer, Nadja
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are increasingly incorporated in diverse products to confer antimicrobial properties. They are released into the environment during manufacture, after disposal, and from the products during use. Because AgNPs bioaccumulate in brain, it is important to understand how they interact with neural cell physiology. We found that the focal adhesion (FA)-associated protein cadherin aggregated in a dose-dependent response to AgNP exposure in differentiating cultured B35 neuroblastoma cells. These aggregates tended to colocalize with F-actin inclusions that form in response to AgNP and also contain β-catenin. However, using hyperspectral microscopy, we demonstrate that these multi-protein aggregates did not colocalize with the AgNPs themselves. Furthermore, expression and organization of the FA protein vinculin did not change in cells exposed to AgNP. Our findings suggest that AgNPs activate an intermediate mechanism which leads to formation of aggregates via specific protein-protein interactions. Finally, we detail the changes in hyperspectral profiles of AgNPs during different stages of cell culture and immunocytochemistry processing. AgNPs in citrate-stabilized solution present mostly blue with some rainbow spectra and these are maintained upon mounting in Prolong Gold. Exposure to tissue culture medium results in a uniform green spectral shift that is not further altered by fixation and protein block steps of immunocytochemistry. •Silver nanoparticles induce formation of cadherin aggregates in neural cells.•Cadherin aggregates colocalize with F-actin inclusions and β-cadherin.•Multi-protein aggregates do not colocalize with nanoparticles.•Hyperspectral properties of silver nanoparticles change through cell culture.•Spectra shift to uniform green after culture in medium without proteins.
ISSN:0887-2333
1879-3177
DOI:10.1016/j.tiv.2024.105837