Nanomaterials in the environment acquire an “eco‐corona” impacting their toxicity to Daphnia magna —a call for updating toxicity testing policies

Fatima Nasser, Julia Constantinou, Iseult Lynch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)
141 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Nanomaterials (NMs) are particles with at least one dimension between 1 and 100 nm and a large surface area to volume ratio, providing them with exceptional qualities that are exploited in a variety of industrial fields. Deposition of NMs into environmental waters during or after use leads to the adsorption of an ecological (eco‐) corona, whereby a layer of natural biomolecules coats the NM changing its stability, identity and ultimately toxicity. The eco‐corona is not currently incorporated into ecotoxicity tests, although it has been shown to alter the interactions of NMs with organisms such as Daphnia magna (D. magna). Here, the literature on environmental biomolecule interactions with NMs is synthesized and a framework for understanding the eco‐corona composition and its role in modulating NMs ecotoxicity is presented, utilizing D. magna as a model. The importance of including biomolecules as part of the current international efforts to update the standard testing protocols for NMs, is highlighted. Facilitating the formation of an eco‐corona prior to NMs ecotoxicity testing will ensure that signaling pathways perturbed by the NMs are real rather than being associated with the damage arising from reactive NM surfaces “acquiring” a corona by pulling biomolecules from the organism's surface.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1800412
JournalProteomics
Early online date21 Nov 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Dec 2019

Keywords

  • biomolecule corona
  • bio-nano interface
  • ecological corona
  • ecological identity
  • nanosafety assessment
  • surface binding

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