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Copper Oxide and Zinc Oxide Nanomaterials Act as Inhibitors of Multidrug Resistance Transport in Sea Urchin Embryos: Their Role as Chemosensitizers Bing Wu, Cristina Torres Duarte, Bryan J. Cole, and Gary Cherr Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b00345 • Publication Date (Web): 07 Apr 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 12, 2015
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Copper Oxide and Zinc Oxide Nanomaterials Act as
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Inhibitors of Multidrug Resistance Transport in Sea
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Urchin Embryos: Their Role as Chemosensitizers
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Bing Wu, †,‡ Cristina Torres-Duarte, ‡ Bryan J. Cole, ‡ Gary N. Cherr‡,§,
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†
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Environment, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210023, P.R. China
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‡
Bodega Marine Laboratory, University of California, Davis, California, USA
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§
Departments of Environmental Toxicology and Nutrition, University of California,
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Davis, California, USA
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the
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Gary N. Cherr
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Bodega Marine Laboratory
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University of California Davis
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PO Box 247
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2099, Westside Road,
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Bodega Bay, CA 94951 USA
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Bodega Bay, CA 94923 USA
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Phone: 001-707-875-2051
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FAX: 001-707-875-2009
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E-mail:
[email protected] Corresponding Author
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Notes
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The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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ABSTRACT
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The ability of engineered nanomaterials (NMs) to act as inhibitors of ATP-binding
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cassette (ABC) efflux transporters in embryos of white sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus)
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was studied. Nano-copper oxide (nano-CuO), nano-zinc oxide (nano-ZnO), and their
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corresponding metal ions (CuSO4 and ZnSO4) were used as target chemicals. The
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results showed that nano-CuO, nano-ZnO, CuSO4 and ZnSO4, even at relatively low
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concentrations (0.5ppm), significantly increased calcein-AM (CAM, an indicator of
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ABC transporter activity) accumulation in sea urchin embryos at different stages of
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development. Exposure to nano-CuO, a very low solubility NM, at increasing times
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after fertilization (>30min) decreased CAM accumulation, but nano-ZnO (much more
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soluble NM) did not, indicating that metal ions could cross the hardened fertilization
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envelope, but not undissolved metal oxide NMs. Moreover, non-toxic levels (0.5ppm)
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of nano-CuO and nano-ZnO significantly increased developmental toxicity of
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vinblastine (an established ABC transporter substrate) and functioned as
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chemosensitizers. The multidrug resistance associated protein (MRP, one of ABC
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transporters) inhibitor MK571 significantly increased copper concentrations in
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embryos, indicating ABC transporters are important in maintaining low intracellular
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copper levels. We show that low concentrations of nano-CuO and nano-ZnO can
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make embryos more susceptible to other contaminants, representing a potent
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amplification of nanomaterial-related developmental toxicity.
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KEYWORDS: Sea
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Nano-ZnO, Developmental toxicity
urchin,
ABC transporter, Chemosensitizer, Nano-CuO,
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TOC Art
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INTRODUCTION
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Large-scale production and application of metal oxide nanomaterials (NMs) in
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several industries has led to environmental concern in estuarine and marine
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environments1, 2. Nano-zinc oxide (nano-ZnO) and nano-copper oxide (nano-CuO) are
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two common metal oxide NMs. Nano-ZnO is used as an ultraviolet light scattering
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additive in cosmetics such as sunscreens, toothpastes and beauty products, and is
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widely used in rubber manufacturing, production of solar cells and liquid crystal
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displays, pigments, chemical fibers, and textiles3, 4. The most important and unique
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application of nano-CuO is in electronics and technology (semiconductors, electronic
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chips, heat transfer nanofluids), as nano-CuO has excellent thermophysical properties5.
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Nano-CuO has also been used in air and liquid filtration, wood preservation, and
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bioactive coatings, including antifouling paints
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nano-CuO have been assessed in aquatic organisms
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have assessed impacts of metal oxide NMs on marine embryos1, 8.
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. The toxicity of nano-ZnO and 8-16
. However, very few studies
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Developmental toxicity caused by metal oxide NMs has received some recent
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attention, although not in marine developing systems. For example, Zhao et al.17
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found that nano-ZnO and Zn2+ elicited embryonic toxicity in fish by increasing
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reactive oxidative species (ROS) and/or compromising the cellular oxidative stress
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response. Nations et al.18 found gastrointestinal, spinal, and other abnormalities in the
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freshwater amphibian, Xenopus laevis, occurred following nano-CuO and nano-ZnO
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exposures. The minimum concentration to inhibit growth of tadpoles exposed to
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nano-CuO or nano-ZnO was very high (10 ppm). Most studies on developmental
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toxicity induced by metal oxide NMs have focused on morphological abnormalities 8.
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In general, relatively high levels of NMs were required to observe these effects.
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One unexamined aspect of metal oxide NMs toxicity is their potential to act as
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chemosensitizers, which are compounds that increase the toxicity of other chemicals
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through their interaction with or inhibition of toxicant defense mechanisms19-22. In
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embryos, ATP-binding cassette (ABC) efflux transporters are responsible for
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multidrug resistance22-28 and play important roles in protection from contaminants.
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ABC transporters are known to efflux numerous compounds that include hormones,
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sterols, lipids, phospholipids, oligopeptides, nucleotides, chloride ions, heavy metals
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that have been conjugated to metallothionein or glutathione, and a wide range of
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moderately hydrophobic xenobiotics28-31. This protective role as the first line of
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defense against xenobiotics32 is similar to the protective functions ascribed to these
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transporters in somatic cells and consistent with their expression in the adult blood–
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brain barrier, blood–testis barrier, and in intestinal epithelia33, 34. The inhibition of
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ABC transporter activities can increase the accumulation of other toxic chemicals that
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are substrates for efflux transporters, thus rendering embryos susceptible to these
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chemicals.
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Aquatic ecosystems, including estuarine and near shore marine environments, are
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expected to be one of the most heavily impacted by NM pollution 1, 2. Sea urchins are
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key species in coastal environments and are a major model system in elucidating a
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variety of classic developmental problems. In this study, the potential of nano-CuO
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and nano-ZnO to inhibit efflux transporters, and thus act as chemosensitizers, was
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studied in embryos of the white sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus). This research provides
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a new endpoint of chemosensitization via indirect NM toxicity.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Reagents
Potassium
chloride
(KCl),
dimethyl
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sulphoxide
(DMSO),
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ethylhexadecyldimethylammonium bromide, 1,10-phenanthroline, hydrogen peroxide
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and sodium hydroxide were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). ZnSO4
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and CuSO4 were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Hydrochloric acid
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trace metal grade was purchased from Fisher Scientific (Fair Lawn, NJ). Cell dyes
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Calcien-AM
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mitochondrial membrane potential probe JC1 (5,5′,6,6′-tetrachloro-1,1′,3,3′
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-tetraethylbenzimidazolylcarbocyanine
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Technologies (Carlsbad, CA). DMSO was used as a solvent for all cell dye solutions.
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Vinblastine and MK571 were obtained from Cayman Chemical (Ann Arbor, MI).
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Paraformaldehyde was purchased from Electron Microscopy Sciences (Hatfield, PA).
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Nanomaterials
(CAM),
2’,7’-Dichlorofluorescin
iodide)
diacetate
were
(DCFH)
purchased
and
from
the
Life
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Nano-ZnO was purchased from Meliorum Technologies (Rochester, NY).
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Nano-CuO was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Nano-ZnO and
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nano-CuO have been previously characterized by Keller et al.9 and Adeleye et al.35,
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respectively. All chemicals solutions were freshly prepared for each analysis. Their
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stock solutions were at a concentration of 1000 ppm prepared in ddH2O, sonicated
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(B-2200R-1, Fisher Scientific, USA) for 30 min, then 10 ppm alginate (final
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concentration) was added. All stocks were diluted into desired exposure
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concentrations in filtered seawater (FSW) containing 0.2 ppm alginate (final
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concentration)36. Six concentrations (0, 0.5, 1, 2, 5 and 10 ppm) for nano metal oxides
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and soluble metal ions were used for all analyses. To determine the copper
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concentration in copper oxide nanoparticle suspensions, samples were acidified to pH
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1.7 with trace metal grade 6N HCl and analyzed with the method described below.
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Sea urchin embryo culture
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Adult white sea urchins (Lytechinus pictus) were kept at the University of
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California Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory (Bodega Bay, CA) in flow-through
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seawater tanks. Gametes were collected and fertilized as described previously8. Prior
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to use in experiments, eggs were washed three times in 0.2 µm FSW containing 0.2
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ppm alginate (final concentration). Sperm was stored dry at 4oC until use.
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Fertilization success was checked under the microscope and only batches of embryos
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exhibiting >90% successful fertilization were used for subsequent experiment. All
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experiments were conducted at 14oC.
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Cytotoxicity assays
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Sea urchin embryos at 30min post-fertilization were exposed to target metals in
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96-well plate (100 embryos per well). To analyze the mitochondrial membrane
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potential stability after 3.5 h exposure to target metals, 0.2 µg/ml JC1 (final
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concentration) was added to the each well and incubated for 1h. Then the green
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(Ex:485nm, Em:535nm) and red (Ex:530nm, Em:630nm) fluorescence values were
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measured. For analysis of ROS production after 3.75 h exposure of target metals, 1.0
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µM DCF (final concentration) was added to each well, and incubated for 45 min. The
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DCF fluorescence values were measured at 485nm (excitation wavelength) and
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535nm (emission wavelengths). The fluorescence was measured using a TECAN
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GENios microplate reader (Maennedorf, Switzerland). Each combination of target
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chemical concentration and probe assay were internally replicated in 8 wells of each
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plate. Each exposure plate was replicated 3X for each target chemical using a
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different batch of embryos collected from different sea urchins.
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Cellular efflux pump inhibition assay
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Cellular efflux pump inhibition was measured by CAM accumulation. Embryos
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at cleavage and blastula stages were used. For the cleavage stage, sea urchin embryos
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(100 embryos per well) were exposed to target metals in 96-well plate. For
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comparison among different exposure concentrations, the embryos at 30min
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post-fertilization were used. For analysis on the influence of the fertilization envelope
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on CAM accumulation, the embryos at 5, 15, 30, 60 and 90 min post-fertilization
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were used. After 3 h exposure to target metals, 0.5 µM CAM (final concentration) was
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added into each well. Then the plates were incubated for 1.5 h at 14oC, and measured
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in plate reader. The excitation wavelength and emission wavelengths for CAM were
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485nm and 535nm, respectively. For the fluorescence imaging, the same exposure
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approaches were applied, but 6-well plates were used. Fluorescence imaging was
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performed using a scanning laser confocal microscope (Fluoview 500, Olympus,
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Japan).
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For the embryos at blastula stage, 50 embryos per well at 20 h post-fertilization
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were added to a 96-well plate. The exposure procedures and CAM measurement were
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performed as described above. The embryos were fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde in
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FSW immediately before plate reader measurements were made such that blastulae
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were in a monolayer on the bottom of the wells.
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Vinblastine assay
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The vinblastine (0-0.75µM dose response) assay was performed in 24-well plates
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at a density of 100 embryos/ml. Embryos at 30min post-fertilization were exposed to
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0.5 ppm nano-CuO, nano-ZnO and ZnSO4, and 0.2ppm CuSO4. When embryos in the
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control group developed to the 4-cell stage, vinblastine (0-0.75µM) with or without
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5µM MK571 (positive control) were added. When embryos in the control group
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developed to the 8-cell stage (>90%), the embryos in all groups were fixed using 1%
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paraformaldehyde. Then the percentage of 8-cell embryos in treated groups was
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counted. Each combination of target chemical and vinblastine concentration was
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internally replicated in 2 wells of each plate. Each exposure was replicated 3X for
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each target chemical using different batches of embryos collected from sea urchins.
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Copper measurement in sea urchin embryos
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Embryos (200 embryos/ml) at the blastula stage were exposed to CuSO4 and
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nano-CuO at 1ppm, with or without 10µM MK571, in 6-well plates. After 4.5h
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exposure, embryos were collected from the plates and washed three times with
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Ca2+-Mg2+-free artificial seawater (10 mM EDTA, pH 5.0), and then once with FSW,
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all at 14oC. Embryos were then homogenized in FSW using a probe sonicator. The pH
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was adjusted to 1.7 using 6 M copper-free HCl. Samples were incubated overnight at
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4°C, and centrifuged at 14,000 g for 10 min. The copper concentration in the
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supernatant was measured using a modified method by Durand et al. 37. The method is
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based on the light-emitting catalytic decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by
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copper(II)-1,10-phenanthroline complex. Standard solutions were prepared by
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diluting Certified Copper Standard solution (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Luis MO) in FSW
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acidified to pH 1.7 with copper-free 6N HCl. Standard solutions and samples are
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placed in a 96-well plate, and a freshly made solution of reagents was added. Final
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mixture contains 7.7mM ethylhexadecyldimethylammonium bromide, 0.43 µM
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tetraethylenepentamine, 29mM NaOH, 2.9mM 1,10-phenanthroline and 4% hydrogen
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peroxide. Light emission was detected using a TECAN GENios microplate reader
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(Maennedorf, Switzerland) in the luminescence mode. Concentration was determined
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by comparison with a standard curve conducted for each plate.
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Localization of nano-CuO in blastula stage embryos was conducted according to
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the method of Jose et al.38. Briefly, hatched blastula embryos were incubated in
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nano-CuO or CuSO4 (1ppm) for 4.5h, washed as described above with
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Ca2+-Mg2+-free artificial seawater (10 mM EDTA, pH 5), and fixed in 3%
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paraformaldehyde in FSW for 18 h at 40C.
After washing, blastula were incubated
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in 10µM Hoechst 33342 (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Luis MO), mounted on slides and
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compressed under coverglass, then viewed using scanning laser confocal microscopy
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using both interference contrast optics (transmitted light) and excitation at 405nm
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(blue diode laser) with a 60X water immersion lens on an Olympus BX61WI fixed
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stage upright microscope.
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RESULTS
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Characterization of nano-CuO and nano-ZnO
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Particles used in this study have been previously characterized9,
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. Major
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physicochemical properties are presented in Table 1. Both NMs rapidly aggregate in
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high ionic strength media, such as seawater, reaching a stable size in 60 min or less of
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around 400 nm for nano-ZnO and around 600 nm for nano-CuO. Sedimentation rates
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are concentration and ionic strength dependent. When a 10 ppm solution is made at
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high ionic strength, 90% of nano-ZnO particles remain in suspension after 6 h, while
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60% remains in suspension for a 50 ppm solution. Nano-CuO has a higher
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sedimentation rate, with less than 25% of nanoparticles remaining in suspension after
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6 h for a 50 ppm solution35.
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Nano-ZnO undergoes rapid dissolution in FSW, being almost complete within
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10-20 h for a 1 ppm solution8, 9. On the other hand, Adeleye et al.35 reported very low
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dissolution rates of less than 4% for a 10 ppm solution of nano-CuO after 90 days at
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pH 7 (100 mM NaCl).
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The dispersed copper oxide nanoparticles were analyzed to determine the copper
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content. The copper concentration was between typically between 69% to 77% of the
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nominal concentrations used (i.e. 10 ppm of nano-CuO is equivalent to 6.9-7.7 ppm of
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Cu2+).
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ROS generation in cleavage stage embryos
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The cell dye DCFH-DA was used to assess the generation of ROS. Nano-CuO at
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relatively low concentration (0.5, 1, and 2 ppm) caused a significant increase in DCF
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fluorescence values (Figure 1A), indicating an increase in intracellular ROS. However,
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higher concentrations of nano-CuO (5 and 10ppm) and CuSO4 (0.5-10ppm) did not
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cause an increase in DCF fluorescence values, and in fact, these fluorescence values
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decreased. For nano-ZnO and ZnSO4, we found that they have similar effects of ROS
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generation. A significant increase in DCF fluorescence values was found at 0.5, 1, 2,
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and 5ppm, but not at 10ppm. (Figure 1B).
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NMs induce changes in mitochondrial membrane potential in cleavage stage
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embryos
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Mitochondrial membrane potential was determined by cell dye JC1. A decreasing
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ratio of red/green fluorescence values from JC1 indicates a loss of mitochondrial
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membrane potential, and can be indicative of apoptosis. Nano-CuO did not cause
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changes in mitochondrial membrane potential (Figure 1C), but CuSO4 significantly
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decreased the ratio of red and green fluorescence values of JC1 at 1, 2, and 5ppm. For
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nano-ZnO, this NM caused a significant decrease in the ratio of red and green
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fluorescence values at 1, 2, and 5ppm (Figure 1D). ZnSO4 also decreased the ratio at
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0.5, 1, and 2ppm.
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Increased Calcien-AM (CAM) accumulation in sea urchin embryos treated with
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NMs
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Plasma membrane ABC transporter activity was assessed by CAM dye
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accumulation. CAM is an established indicator of ABC transporter efflux activity39, 40.
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CAM is not fluorescent and is membrane permeable, but once inside of cells, CAM is
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cleaved by esterases to calcein, which is fluorescent, is membrane impermeable, and
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is poorly effluxed from cells41, 42. Thus, the level of CAM accumulation can indicate
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the relative activity of ABC transporters. Two developmental stages (cleavage and
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blastula stages) of sea urchin embryos were utilized in this study. Both stages showed
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two important developmental stages of sea urchin embryos. At the cleavage stage (2-8
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cell), sea urchin embryos are surrounded by the fertilization envelope and cannot
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swim, but at the blastula stage, embryos hatch and can swim.
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At the cleavage stage, sea urchin embryos were exposed to nano-CuO, CuSO4,
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nano-ZnO and ZnSO4 at 30 min post-fertilization. After a 4.5h exposure, nano-CuO,
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CuSO4, nano-ZnO and ZnSO4 significantly increased CAM accumulation (p