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Silver materials induce differential cytotoxicity and pulmonary toxicity based on size and shape

Authors
Pak, P.J.Kang, B.H.Chung, N.
Issue Date
2015
Publisher
Korean Society for Applied Biological Chemistry
Keywords
Cytochalasin D; In vitro toxicity; Pulmonary toxicity; Silver materials; Silver wire
Citation
Journal of Applied Biological Chemistry, v.58, no.2, pp.113 - 116
Indexed
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
Journal of Applied Biological Chemistry
Volume
58
Number
2
Start Page
113
End Page
116
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/95966
DOI
10.3839/jabc.2015.020
ISSN
1976-0442
Abstract
Silver materials may be toxic in humans because they can enter the body and accumulate, typically in the lungs. We hypothesized that the cytotoxicity of naïve silver materials is affected by their size and shape. Our in vitro assays revealed that the overall toxicity was in the following order: submicro-particles > wires > micro-particles. These results contrast with previous studies, which showed that silver wires are the most toxic among the three tested materials, possibly due to differences in cell lines. Evaluations of in vivo pulmonary toxicity revealed eryptosis in the cavity lining of the lung sections. The observed eryptosis was consistent with the in vitro results. Our results indicate that silver materialinduced cytotoxicity must be measured and compared using various methods. © The Korean Society for Applied Biological Chemistry 2015.
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