Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models

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Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models. / Møller, Peter; Jensen, Ditte Marie; Wils, Regitze Sølling; Guerra Andersen, Maria Helena; Danielsen, Pernille Høgh; Roursgaard, Martin.

In: Nanotoxicology, Vol. 11, No. 9-10, 2017, p. 1237-1256.

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Møller, P, Jensen, DM, Wils, RS, Guerra Andersen, MH, Danielsen, PH & Roursgaard, M 2017, 'Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models', Nanotoxicology, vol. 11, no. 9-10, pp. 1237-1256. https://doi.org/10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549

APA

Møller, P., Jensen, D. M., Wils, R. S., Guerra Andersen, M. H., Danielsen, P. H., & Roursgaard, M. (2017). Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models. Nanotoxicology, 11(9-10), 1237-1256. https://doi.org/10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549

Vancouver

Møller P, Jensen DM, Wils RS, Guerra Andersen MH, Danielsen PH, Roursgaard M. Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models. Nanotoxicology. 2017;11(9-10):1237-1256. https://doi.org/10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549

Author

Møller, Peter ; Jensen, Ditte Marie ; Wils, Regitze Sølling ; Guerra Andersen, Maria Helena ; Danielsen, Pernille Høgh ; Roursgaard, Martin. / Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models. In: Nanotoxicology. 2017 ; Vol. 11, No. 9-10. pp. 1237-1256.

Bibtex

@article{b998a6ca32d6425abb2a64cb1bf5a66d,
title = "Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models",
abstract = "Nanosized titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been investigated in numerous studies on genotoxicity, including comet assay endpoints and oxidatively damaged DNA in cell cultures and animal models. The results have been surprisingly mixed, which might be attributed to physico-chemical differences of the tested TiO2. In the present review, we assess the role of certain methodological issues and publication bias. The analysis shows that studies on DNA strand breaks without proper assay controls or very low intra-group variation tend to show statistically significant effects. Levels of oxidatively damaged DNA, measured by the enzyme-modified comet assay, tend to show no effect in studies that have not included proper assay controls or they have uncertainty about the measurement. In addition, there are indications of publication and reporting bias. Nevertheless, the analysis shows that Aeroxide P25 generates DNA strand breaks in a concentration-dependent manner, which is not dependent on the duration of exposure. The standard comet assay seems to be able to discriminate between the genotoxicity of different types of TiO2, where anatase TiO2 seems to be the form with strongest genotoxic potential. Cell culture studies also demonstrate increased levels of oxidatively damaged DNA after exposure to TiO2. There are relatively few studies on animal models where DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA have been tested with reliable methods. Collectively, this review shows that exposure to nanosized TiO2 is associated with genotoxicity in cells, whereas there are still too few reliable studies to assess the genotoxic potential in animal models.",
keywords = "Oxidative DNA damage, 8-oxodG, Fpg, endonuclease III, hOGG1",
author = "Peter M{\o}ller and Jensen, {Ditte Marie} and Wils, {Regitze S{\o}lling} and {Guerra Andersen}, {Maria Helena} and Danielsen, {Pernille H{\o}gh} and Martin Roursgaard",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "1237--1256",
journal = "Nanotoxicology",
issn = "1743-5390",
publisher = "Informa Healthcare",
number = "9-10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessment of evidence for nanosized titanium dioxide-generated DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA in cells and animal models

AU - Møller, Peter

AU - Jensen, Ditte Marie

AU - Wils, Regitze Sølling

AU - Guerra Andersen, Maria Helena

AU - Danielsen, Pernille Høgh

AU - Roursgaard, Martin

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Nanosized titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been investigated in numerous studies on genotoxicity, including comet assay endpoints and oxidatively damaged DNA in cell cultures and animal models. The results have been surprisingly mixed, which might be attributed to physico-chemical differences of the tested TiO2. In the present review, we assess the role of certain methodological issues and publication bias. The analysis shows that studies on DNA strand breaks without proper assay controls or very low intra-group variation tend to show statistically significant effects. Levels of oxidatively damaged DNA, measured by the enzyme-modified comet assay, tend to show no effect in studies that have not included proper assay controls or they have uncertainty about the measurement. In addition, there are indications of publication and reporting bias. Nevertheless, the analysis shows that Aeroxide P25 generates DNA strand breaks in a concentration-dependent manner, which is not dependent on the duration of exposure. The standard comet assay seems to be able to discriminate between the genotoxicity of different types of TiO2, where anatase TiO2 seems to be the form with strongest genotoxic potential. Cell culture studies also demonstrate increased levels of oxidatively damaged DNA after exposure to TiO2. There are relatively few studies on animal models where DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA have been tested with reliable methods. Collectively, this review shows that exposure to nanosized TiO2 is associated with genotoxicity in cells, whereas there are still too few reliable studies to assess the genotoxic potential in animal models.

AB - Nanosized titanium dioxide (TiO2) has been investigated in numerous studies on genotoxicity, including comet assay endpoints and oxidatively damaged DNA in cell cultures and animal models. The results have been surprisingly mixed, which might be attributed to physico-chemical differences of the tested TiO2. In the present review, we assess the role of certain methodological issues and publication bias. The analysis shows that studies on DNA strand breaks without proper assay controls or very low intra-group variation tend to show statistically significant effects. Levels of oxidatively damaged DNA, measured by the enzyme-modified comet assay, tend to show no effect in studies that have not included proper assay controls or they have uncertainty about the measurement. In addition, there are indications of publication and reporting bias. Nevertheless, the analysis shows that Aeroxide P25 generates DNA strand breaks in a concentration-dependent manner, which is not dependent on the duration of exposure. The standard comet assay seems to be able to discriminate between the genotoxicity of different types of TiO2, where anatase TiO2 seems to be the form with strongest genotoxic potential. Cell culture studies also demonstrate increased levels of oxidatively damaged DNA after exposure to TiO2. There are relatively few studies on animal models where DNA strand breaks and oxidatively damaged DNA have been tested with reliable methods. Collectively, this review shows that exposure to nanosized TiO2 is associated with genotoxicity in cells, whereas there are still too few reliable studies to assess the genotoxic potential in animal models.

KW - Oxidative DNA damage

KW - 8-oxodG

KW - Fpg

KW - endonuclease III

KW - hOGG1

U2 - 10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549

DO - 10.1080/17435390.2017.1406549

M3 - Review

C2 - 29172839

VL - 11

SP - 1237

EP - 1256

JO - Nanotoxicology

JF - Nanotoxicology

SN - 1743-5390

IS - 9-10

ER -

ID: 188228612