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The puzzling issue of silica toxicity: are silanols bridging the gaps between surface states and pathogenicity?

Authors :
Cristina Pavan
Massimo Delle Piane
Maria Gullo
Francesca Filippi
Bice Fubini
Peter Hoet
Claire J. Horwell
François Huaux
Dominique Lison
Cristina Lo Giudice
Gianmario Martra
Eliseo Montfort
Roel Schins
Marialore Sulpizi
Karsten Wegner
Michelle Wyart-Remy
Christina Ziemann
Francesco Turci
Source :
Particle and Fibre Toxicology, Vol 16, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMC, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Background Silica continues to represent an intriguing topic of fundamental and applied research across various scientific fields, from geology to physics, chemistry, cell biology, and particle toxicology. The pathogenic activity of silica is variable, depending on the physico-chemical features of the particles. In the last 50 years, crystallinity and capacity to generate free radicals have been recognized as relevant features for silica toxicity. The ‘surface’ also plays an important role in silica toxicity, but this term has often been used in a very general way, without defining which properties of the surface are actually driving toxicity. How the chemical features (e.g., silanols and siloxanes) and configuration of the silica surface can trigger toxic responses remains incompletely understood. Main body Recent developments in surface chemistry, cell biology and toxicology provide new avenues to improve our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of the adverse responses to silica particles. New physico-chemical methods can finely characterize and quantify silanols at the surface of silica particles. Advanced computational modelling and atomic force microscopy offer unique opportunities to explore the intimate interactions between silica surface and membrane models or cells. In recent years, interdisciplinary research, using these tools, has built increasing evidence that surface silanols are critical determinants of the interaction between silica particles and biomolecules, membranes, cell systems, or animal models. It also has become clear that silanol configuration, and eventually biological responses, can be affected by impurities within the crystal structure, or coatings covering the particle surface. The discovery of new molecular targets of crystalline as well as amorphous silica particles in the immune system and in epithelial lung cells represents new possible toxicity pathways. Cellular recognition systems that detect specific features of the surface of silica particles have been identified. Conclusions Interdisciplinary research bridging surface chemistry to toxicology is progressively solving the puzzling issue of the variable toxicity of silica. Further interdisciplinary research is ongoing to elucidate the intimate mechanisms of silica pathogenicity, to possibly mitigate or reduce surface reactivity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17438977
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Particle and Fibre Toxicology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0de33364d2914fcfb2a01ae8fd10e3be
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12989-019-0315-3