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Currently, there is a lack of knowledge of how complex metal oxide nanomaterials, like LiCoO2 (LCO) nanosheets, interact with eukaryotic green algae. Previously, LCO was reported to cause a number of physiological impacts to Raphidocelis subcapitata including endpoints related to growth, reproduction, pigment & lipid biosynthesis, and carbon biomass assimilation. Furthermore, LCO was proven to physically enter the cells, thus indicating the possibility for it to directly interact with key subcellular components. However, the mechanisms through which LCO interacts with these key subcellular components is still unknown. This study assesses the interactions of LCO at the biointerface of R. subcapitata using a novel multiplexed algal cytological imaging (MACI) assay and machine learning in order to predict its phytotoxic mechanism of action (MoA). Algal cells were exposed to varying concentrations of LCO, and their phenotypic profiles were compared to that of cells treated with reference chemicals which had already established MoAs. Hierarchical clustering and machine learning analyses indicated photosynthetic electron transport to be the most probable phytotoxic MoA of LCO. Additionally, single-cell chlorophyll fluorescence results demonstrated an increase in irreversibly oxidized photosystem II proteins. Lastly, LCO-treated cells were observed to have less nuclei/cell and less DNA content/nucleus when compared to non-treated cell controls.more » « less
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Developing a materials perspective of how to control the degradation and negative impact of complex metal oxides requires an integrated understanding of how these nanomaterials transform in the environment and interact with biological systems. Doping with aluminum is known to stabilize oxide materials, but has not been assessed cohesively from synthesis to environmental fate and biological impact. In the present study, the influence of aluminum doping on metal ion release from transition metal oxides was investigated by comparing aqueous transformations of lithium nickel cobalt aluminum oxide (LiNi0.82Co0.15Al0.03O2; NCA) and lithium nickel cobalt oxide (LiNi0.80Co0.20O2; NC) nanoparticles and by calculating the energetics of metal release using a density functional theory (DFT) and thermodynamics method. Two model environmental organisms were used to assess biological impact, and metal ion release was compared for NCA and NC nanoparticles incubated in their respective growth media: moderately hard reconstituted water (MHRW) for the freshwater invertebrate Daphnia magna (D. magna) and minimal growth medium for the Gram-negative bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (S. oneidensis). The amount of metal ions released was reduced for NCA compared to NC in MHRW, which correlated to changes in the modeled energetics of release upon Al substitution in the lattice. In minimal medium, metal ion release was approximately an order of magnitude higher compared to MHRW and was similar to the stoichiometry of the bulk nanoparticles for both NCA and NC. Interpretation of the release profiles and modeling indicated that the increase in total metal ion release and the reduced influence of Al doping arises from lactate complexation of metal ions in solution. The relative biological impacts of NC and NCA exposure for both S. oneidensis and D. magna were consistent with the metal release trends observed for minimal medium and MHRW, respectively. Together, these results demonstrate how a combined experimental and computational approach provides valuable insight into the aqueous transformations and biological impacts of complex metal oxide nanoparticles.more » « less
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Use of complex metal oxide nanoparticles has drastically risen in recent years, especially due to their utility in electric vehicle batteries. However, use of these materials has outpaced our understanding of how they might affect environmental organisms, which they could encounter through release during manufacture, use, and disposal. In particular, little is known about the effects of chronic exposure to complex metal oxide nanoparticles. Here, we have focused on an environmentally-relevant bacterial species, Shewanella oneidensis, which is ubiquitous in nature and responsible for bioremediation of heavy metals, and assessed the toxic effects of nanoscale lithiated nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC), which is an emerging battery cathode material for electronic devices. We previously reported that chronic exposure of S. oneidensis to NMC results in the emergence of an adaptive phenotype where the bacteria are able to tolerate otherwise lethal concentrations of NMC. In the present study, we aim to investigate the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and changes in phenotype of the NMC-adapted bacterial population. We found that NMC-exposed bacteria possess ROS-containing membrane vesicles, as well as an increased propensity to generate random DNA mutations and harbor other DNA damage. Thus, our data indicate substantial genetic-level variation in bacteria that results from chronic exposure to toxic complex metal oxide nanomaterials.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Lithium cobalt oxide (LiCoO 2 ), an example of nanoscale transition metal oxide and a widely commercialized cathode material in lithium ion batteries, has been shown to induce oxidative stress and generate intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) in model organisms. In this study, we aimed to understand the time-dependent roles of abiotic ROS generation and Co ions released in aqueous medium by LiCoO 2 NPs, and examined the induced biological responses in model bacterium, B. subtilis upon exposure. We found that the redox-active LiCoO 2 NPs produced abiotic ROS primarily through H 2 O 2 generation when freshly suspended. Subsequently, the freshly-suspended LiCoO 2 NPs induced additional DNA breakage, and changes in expression of oxidative stress genes in B. subtilis that could not be accounted for by the released Co ions alone. Notably, in 48 hour old LiCoO 2 suspensions, H 2 O 2 generation subsided while higher concentrations of Co ions were released. The biological responses in DNA damage and gene expression to the aged LiCoO 2 NPs recapitulated those induced by the released Co ions. Our results demonstrated oxidative stress mechanisms for bacteria exposed to LiCoO 2 NPs were mediated by the generation of distinct biotic and abiotic ROS species, which depended on the aqueous transformation state of the NPs. This study revealed the interdependent and dynamic nature of NP transformation and their biological consequences where the state of NPs resulted in distinct NP-specific mechanisms of oxidative injury. Our work highlights the need to capture the dynamic transformation of NPs that may activate the multiple routes of oxidative stress responses in cells.more » « less
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Lithium intercalation compounds, such as the complex metal oxide, lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (LiNi x Mn y Co 1−x−y O 2 , herein referred to as NMC), have demonstrated their utility as energy storage materials. In response to recent concerns about the global supply of cobalt, industrially synthesized NMCs are shifting toward using NMC compositions with enriched nickel content. However, nickel is one of the more toxic components of NMC materials, meriting investigation of the toxicity of these materials on environmentally relevant organisms. Herein, the toxicity of both nanoscale and microscale Ni-enriched NMCs to the bacterium, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, and the zooplankton, Daphnia magna , was assessed. Unexpectedly, for the bacteria, all NMC materials exhibited similar toxicity when used at equal surface area-based doses, despite the different nickel content in each. Material dissolution to toxic species, namely nickel and cobalt ions, was therefore modelled using a combined density functional theory and thermodynamics approach, which showed an increase in material stability due to the Ni-enriched material containing nickel with an oxidation state >2. The increased stability of this material means that similar dissolution is expected between Ni-enriched NMC and equistoichiometric NMC, which is what was found in experiments. For S. oneidensis , the toxicity of the released ions recapitulated toxicity of NMC nanoparticles. For D. magna , nickel enrichment increased the observed toxicity of NMC, but this toxicity was not due to ion release. Association of the NMC was observed with both S. oneidensis and D. magna. This work demonstrates that for organisms where the major mode of toxicity is based on ion release, including more nickel in NMC does not impact toxicity due to increased particle stability; however, for organisms where the core composition dictates the toxicity, including more nickel in the redesign strategy may lead to greater toxicity due to nanoparticle-specific impacts on the organism.more » « less
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Engineered nanoparticles are incorporated into numerous emerging technologies because of their unique physical and chemical properties. Many of these properties facilitate novel interactions, including both intentional and accidental effects on biological systems. Silver-containing particles are widely used as antimicrobial agents and recent evidence indicates that bacteria rapidly become resistant to these nanoparticles. Much less studied is the chronic exposure of bacteria to particles that were not designed to interact with microorganisms. For example, previous work has demonstrated that the lithium intercalated battery cathode nanosheet, nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC), is cytotoxic and causes a significant delay in growth of Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 upon acute exposure. Here, we report that S. oneidensis MR-1 rapidly adapts to chronic NMC exposure and is subsequently able to survive in much higher concentrations of these particles, providing the first evidence of permanent bacterial resistance following exposure to nanoparticles that were not intended as antibacterial agents. We also found that when NMC-adapted bacteria were subjected to only the metal ions released from this material, their specific growth rates were higher than when exposed to the nanoparticle. As such, we provide here the first demonstration of bacterial resistance to complex metal oxide nanoparticles with an adaptation mechanism that cannot be fully explained by multi-metal adaptation. Importantly, this adaptation persists even after the organism has been grown in pristine media for multiple generations, indicating that S. oneidensis MR-1 has developed permanent resistance to NMC.more » « less
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