Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice

Jilong Wang,1,2,* Hubo Sun,1,2,* Peijun Meng,1,2 Mengmeng Wang,1,2 Mi Tian,3 Yamin Xiong,1,2 Xueying Zhang,1,2 Peili Huang1,2 1School of Public Health, Capital Medical University, 2Beijing Key Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology, 3Medical Experiment and Test Center, Capital Medical University, B...

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Main Authors: Wang J, Sun H, Meng P, Wang M, Tian M, Xiong Y, Zhang X, Huang P
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2017-09-01
Series:International Journal of Nanomedicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/dose-and-time-effect-of-cdte-quantum-dots-on-antioxidant-capacities-of-peer-reviewed-article-IJN
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spelling doaj-3bc575557ca1408b8dcab00a713859ea2020-11-24T23:02:10ZengDove Medical PressInternational Journal of Nanomedicine1178-20132017-09-01Volume 126425643534534Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in miceWang JSun HMeng PWang MTian MXiong YZhang XHuang PJilong Wang,1,2,* Hubo Sun,1,2,* Peijun Meng,1,2 Mengmeng Wang,1,2 Mi Tian,3 Yamin Xiong,1,2 Xueying Zhang,1,2 Peili Huang1,2 1School of Public Health, Capital Medical University, 2Beijing Key Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology, 3Medical Experiment and Test Center, Capital Medical University, Beijing, People’s Republic of China *These authors contributed equally to this work Abstract: Although quantum dot (QD)-induced toxicity occurs due to free radicals, generation of oxidative stress mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation is considered an important mechanism. However, free radical mechanisms are essentially difficult to elucidate at the molecular level because most biologically relevant free radicals are highly reactive and short-lived, making them difficult to directly detect, especially in vivo. Antioxidants play an important role in preventing or, in most cases, limiting the damage caused by ROS. Healthy people and animals possess many endogenous antioxidative substances that scavenge free radicals in vivo to maintain the redox balance and genome integrity. The antioxidant capacity of an organism is highly important but seldom studied. In this study, the dose and time effects of CdTe QDs on the antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys were investigated in mice using the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping technique. We found that the liver and kidneys of healthy mice contain specific antioxidant capacities that scavenge ·OH and ·O2-. Furthermore, oxidative stress markers (superoxide dismutase [SOD], catalase [CAT], glutathione peroxidase [GPx], glutathione [GSH] and malondialdehyde [MDA]) were examined. In dose course studies, the free radical scavenging efficiencies of the liver and kidneys were found to gradually decrease with increasing concentration of CdTe QD exposure. The activities and levels of SOD, CAT, GPx and MDA were observed to increase in treated groups, whereas those of GSH were reduced. The time course studies revealed that the QD-induced antioxidant efficiency reduction was time dependent with GSH decrease and could recover after a period of time. These experimental results offer new information on QD toxicity in vivo. Specifically, CdTe QDs can deplete GSH to reduce the elimination ability of the liver and kidneys for ·OH and ·O2-, thus inducing oxidative damage to tissues. Keywords: quantum dot, antioxidative capacity, free radical elimination, hydroxyl radical, superoxide anion radical, spin-trapping https://www.dovepress.com/dose-and-time-effect-of-cdte-quantum-dots-on-antioxidant-capacities-of-peer-reviewed-article-IJNquantum dotantioxidative capacityfree-radical eliminationhydroxyl radicalsuperoxide radicalspin-trapping
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wang J
Sun H
Meng P
Wang M
Tian M
Xiong Y
Zhang X
Huang P
spellingShingle Wang J
Sun H
Meng P
Wang M
Tian M
Xiong Y
Zhang X
Huang P
Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
International Journal of Nanomedicine
quantum dot
antioxidative capacity
free-radical elimination
hydroxyl radical
superoxide radical
spin-trapping
author_facet Wang J
Sun H
Meng P
Wang M
Tian M
Xiong Y
Zhang X
Huang P
author_sort Wang J
title Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
title_short Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
title_full Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
title_fullStr Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
title_full_unstemmed Dose and time effect of CdTe quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
title_sort dose and time effect of cdte quantum dots on antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys in mice
publisher Dove Medical Press
series International Journal of Nanomedicine
issn 1178-2013
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Jilong Wang,1,2,* Hubo Sun,1,2,* Peijun Meng,1,2 Mengmeng Wang,1,2 Mi Tian,3 Yamin Xiong,1,2 Xueying Zhang,1,2 Peili Huang1,2 1School of Public Health, Capital Medical University, 2Beijing Key Laboratory of Environmental Toxicology, 3Medical Experiment and Test Center, Capital Medical University, Beijing, People’s Republic of China *These authors contributed equally to this work Abstract: Although quantum dot (QD)-induced toxicity occurs due to free radicals, generation of oxidative stress mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation is considered an important mechanism. However, free radical mechanisms are essentially difficult to elucidate at the molecular level because most biologically relevant free radicals are highly reactive and short-lived, making them difficult to directly detect, especially in vivo. Antioxidants play an important role in preventing or, in most cases, limiting the damage caused by ROS. Healthy people and animals possess many endogenous antioxidative substances that scavenge free radicals in vivo to maintain the redox balance and genome integrity. The antioxidant capacity of an organism is highly important but seldom studied. In this study, the dose and time effects of CdTe QDs on the antioxidant capacities of the liver and kidneys were investigated in mice using the electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin-trapping technique. We found that the liver and kidneys of healthy mice contain specific antioxidant capacities that scavenge ·OH and ·O2-. Furthermore, oxidative stress markers (superoxide dismutase [SOD], catalase [CAT], glutathione peroxidase [GPx], glutathione [GSH] and malondialdehyde [MDA]) were examined. In dose course studies, the free radical scavenging efficiencies of the liver and kidneys were found to gradually decrease with increasing concentration of CdTe QD exposure. The activities and levels of SOD, CAT, GPx and MDA were observed to increase in treated groups, whereas those of GSH were reduced. The time course studies revealed that the QD-induced antioxidant efficiency reduction was time dependent with GSH decrease and could recover after a period of time. These experimental results offer new information on QD toxicity in vivo. Specifically, CdTe QDs can deplete GSH to reduce the elimination ability of the liver and kidneys for ·OH and ·O2-, thus inducing oxidative damage to tissues. Keywords: quantum dot, antioxidative capacity, free radical elimination, hydroxyl radical, superoxide anion radical, spin-trapping 
topic quantum dot
antioxidative capacity
free-radical elimination
hydroxyl radical
superoxide radical
spin-trapping
url https://www.dovepress.com/dose-and-time-effect-of-cdte-quantum-dots-on-antioxidant-capacities-of-peer-reviewed-article-IJN
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