Periodic Reporting for period 1 - MolNANOtox (Nanomaterial surface interactions at the molecular level and their impact on ecotoxicity)
Reporting period: 2015-10-05 to 2017-10-04
The overall objective of the project was to characterise the fundamental interactions occurring at the surface of ENM and its impact on environmental ENM chemistry and bio-nano interactions with a range of analytical and imaging techniques. The project focused on the exploration of Raman spectroscopy and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) as a novel application to probe the surface chemistry of ENMs in the context of eco-corona formation, as well as the application of a multimodal approach to imaging the bio-nano interactions.
Raman spectroscopy and SERS were found to be useful for certain classes of ligands. However, it was more powerful combined with other techniques in a protocol. A method based on three techniques: 1) nanoparticle tracking analysis, 2) UV-Visible spectroscopy and 3) Raman spectroscopy (SERS) was developed and used to probe the eco-corona and its impact on the ENM chemistry. It was found that small, strongly binding ligands (chloride, cytosine) played a role in dissolving the Ag-NPs, while larger macromolecules (e.g. natural organic matter, algal exudates) stabilised Ag-NPs during incubation in freshwater media (Figure 1). Moreover, Raman spectroscopy and SERS clearly showed the attachment of chloride from the media on to Ag-NPs, and that this signal was reduced when Ag-NPs were incubated with macromolecules. The results were presented at several major international conferences in vibrational spectroscopy, biogeochemistry and environmental nanoscience. A manuscript is also in preparation for publication.
The second Task Set focused on understanding the effect of the surface chemistry on ENM interactions with a micro-green algae, Raphidocelis subcapitata. One of the challenges in capturing the delicate bio-nano interactions is that there is no single imaging technique with sufficiently high spatial resolution that does not require intrusive sample preparation steps. Therefore, a multimodal approach utilising three complementary methods that maximised sample fidelity (i.e. no sample preparation), high spatial resolution and nanoscale chemistry was developed using dark-field light microscopy (DF-LM), secondary electron microscopy (SEM) and nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS). This was able to identify that the interaction of Ag-NPs with algal cells occurred primarily at the cell surface, and that it was preserved in the samples that had undergone preparation for electron microscopy and mass spectrometry. First set of results were presented at a major environmental chemistry and toxicology conference (SETAC), and have been published as an Open Access publication, while the second set of results are currently being analysed for further dissemination (Figure 2: full article can be viewed at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsnano.7b04556(opens in new window) and further permissions are required for reuse)
The impact of these coatings, or the “eco-corona”, on the ENM interactions with biota is also an emerging research area. The advantage of Raman spectroscopy where one can analyse ENMs in water makes it a highly promising method to explore in environmental nano(eco)toxicology. Combined with the multimodal imaging approach demonstrated in the second Task Set, we will be able to examine the potential effect of the surface chemistry on environmental bio-nano interactions. These capabilities will contribute directly to understanding the overall impact of ENMs in the environment and, in the future, towards engineering their properties for safe and beneficial use for the environment and society. During the project collaborations with larger EU H2020 projects on environmental fate (NanoFASE) and advanced characterisation (ACEnano) have let the findings of this fellowship flow directly into initiatives that will develop robust and more affordable analytical techniques and equipment to inform us on the fate of ENMs in the environment to help deliver safe industrial progress and new products benefitting society economically and functionally.