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Creators/Authors contains: "Hang, Mimi N."

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  1. 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. 
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  2. Lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (Li x Ni y Mn z Co 1−y−z O 2 , 0 < x , y , z < 1, also known as NMC) is a class of cathode materials used in lithium ion batteries. Despite the increasing use of NMC in nanoparticle form for next-generation energy storage applications, the potential environmental impact of released nanoscale NMC is not well characterized. Previously, we showed that the released nickel and cobalt ions from nanoscale Li 1/3 Ni 1/3 Mn 1/3 Co 1/3 O 2 were largely responsible for impacting the growth and survival of the Gram-negative bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (M. N. Hang et al. , Chem. Mater. , 2016, 28 , 1092). Here, we show the first steps toward material redesign of NMC to mitigate its biological impact and to determine how the chemical composition of NMC can significantly alter the biological impact on S. oneidensis . We first synthesized NMC with various stoichiometries, with an aim to reduce the Ni and Co content: Li 0.68 Ni 0.31 Mn 0.39 Co 0.30 O 2 , Li 0.61 Ni 0.23 Mn 0.55 Co 0.22 O 2 , and Li 0.52 Ni 0.14 Mn 0.72 Co 0.14 O 2 . Then, S. oneidensis were exposed to 5 mg L −1 of these NMC formulations, and the impact on bacterial oxygen consumption was analyzed. Measurements of the NMC composition, by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and composition of the nanoparticle suspension aqueous phase, by inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy, showed the release of Li, Ni, Mn, and Co ions. Bacterial inhibition due to redesigned NMC exposure can be ascribed largely to the impact of ionic metal species released from the NMC, most notably Ni and Co. Tuning the NMC stoichiometry to have increased Mn at the expense of Ni and Co showed lowered, but not completely mitigated, biological impact. This study reveals that the chemical composition of NMC nanomaterials is an important parameter to consider in sustainable material design and usage. 
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