Endotoxin contamination in nanomaterials leads to the misinterpretation of immunosafety results
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
Given the presence of engineered nanomaterials in consumers' products and their
application in nanomedicine, nanosafety assessment is becoming increasingly important.
In particular, immunosafety aspects are being actively investigated. In nanomaterial
immunosafety testing strategies, it is important to consider that nanomaterials and
nanoparticles are very easy to become contaminated with endotoxin, which is a widespread
contaminant coming from the Gram-negative bacterial cell membrane. Because
of the potent inflammatory activity of endotoxin, contaminated nanomaterials can show
inflammatory/toxic effects due to endotoxin, which may mask or misidentify the real biological
effects (or lack thereof) of nanomaterials. Therefore, before running immunosafety
assays, either in vitro or in vivo, the presence of endotoxin in nanomaterials must be
evaluated. This calls for using appropriate assays with proper controls, because many
nanomaterials interfere at various levels with the commercially available endotoxin detection
methods. This also underlines the need to develop robust and bespoke strategies
for endotoxin evaluation in nanomaterials.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
engineered nanomaterials; immunosafety assessment; endotoxin contamination; endotoxin evaluation; Limulus amebocyte lysate assay
List of contributors:
Boraschi, Diana
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