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Dive into the research topics where Bryce J. Marquis is active.

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Featured researches published by Bryce J. Marquis.


Analyst | 2009

Analytical methods to assess nanoparticle toxicity

Bryce J. Marquis; Sara A. Love; Katherine L. Braun; Christy L. Haynes

During the past 20 years, improvements in nanoscale materials synthesis and characterization have given scientists great control over the fabrication of materials with features between 1 and 100 nm, unlocking many unique size-dependent properties and, thus, promising many new and/or improved technologies. Recent years have found the integration of such materials into commercial goods; a current estimate suggests there are over 800 nanoparticle-containing consumer products (The Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies Consumer Products Inventory, , accessed Oct. 2008), accounting for 147 billion USD in products in 2007 (Nanomaterials state of the market Q3 2008: stealth success, broad impact, Lux Research Inc., New York, NY, 2008). Despite this increase in the prevalence of engineered nanomaterials, there is little known about their potential impacts on environmental health and safety. The field of nanotoxicology has formed in response to this lack of information and resulted in a flurry of research studies. Nanotoxicology relies on many analytical methods for the characterization of nanomaterials as well as their impacts on in vitro and in vivo function. This review provides a critical overview of these techniques from the perspective of an analytical chemist, and is intended to be used as a reference for scientists interested in conducting nanotoxicological research as well as those interested in nanotoxicological assay development.


Biomaterials | 2012

The role of iron redox state in the genotoxicity of ultrafine superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles.

Neenu Singh; Gareth J. S. Jenkins; Bryant C. Nelson; Bryce J. Marquis; Thierry G.G. Maffeis; Andy Brown; Paul M. Williams; Chris J. Wright; Shareen H. Doak

Ultrafine superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (USPION) hold great potential for revolutionising biomedical applications such as MRI, localised hyperthermia, and targeted drug delivery. Though evidence is increasing regarding the influence of nanoparticle physico-chemical features on toxicity, data however, is lacking that assesses a range of such characteristics in parallel. We show that iron redox state, a subtle though important physico-chemical feature of USPION, dramatically modifies the cellular uptake of these nanoparticles and influences their induction of DNA damage. Surface chemistry was also found to have an impact and evidence to support a potential mechanism of oxidative DNA damage behind the observed responses has been demonstrated. As human exposure to ferrofluids is predicted to increase through nanomedicine based therapeutics, these findings are important in guiding the fabrication of USPION to ensure they have characteristics that support biocompatibility.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2009

Toxicity of therapeutic nanoparticles

Melissa A. Maurer-Jones; Kyle C. Bantz; Sara A. Love; Bryce J. Marquis; Christy L. Haynes

A total of six nanotherapeutic formulations are already approved for medical use and more are in the approval pipeline currently. Despite the massive research effort in nanotherapeutic materials, there is relatively little information about the toxicity of these materials or the tools needed to assess this toxicity. Recently, the scientific community has begun to respond to the paucity of information by investing in the field of nanoparticle toxicology. This review is intended to provide an overview of the techniques needed to assess toxicity of these therapeutic nanoparticles and to summarize the current state of the field. We begin with background on the toxicological assessment techniques used currently as well as considerations in nanoparticle dosing. The toxicological research overview is divided into the most common applications of therapeutic nanoparticles: drug delivery, photodynamic therapy and bioimaging. We end with a perspective section discussing the current technological gaps and promising research aimed at addressing those gaps.


Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2013

Nanosilver suppresses growth and induces oxidative damage to DNA in Caenorhabditis elegans

Piper Reid Hunt; Bryce J. Marquis; Katherine M. Tyner; Sean D. Conklin; Nicholas Olejnik; Bryant C. Nelson; Robert L. Sprando

Studies on the effects of nanomaterial exposure in mammals are limited, and new methods for rapid risk assessment of nanomaterials are urgently required. The utility of Caenorhabditis elegans cultured in axenic liquid media was evaluated as an alternative in vivo model for the purpose of screening nanomaterials for toxic effects. Spherical silver nanoparticles of 10 nm diameter (10nmAg) were used as a test material, and ionic silver from silver acetate as a positive control. Silver uptake and localization, larval growth, morphology and DNA damage were utilized as endpoints for toxicity evaluation. Confocal reflection analysis indicated that 10nmAg localized to the lumen and tissues of the digestive tract of C. elegans. 10nmAg at 10 µg ml–1 reduced the growth of C. elegans larvae, and induced oxidative damage to DNA as measured by 8‐OH guanine levels. Consistent with previously published studies using mammalian models, ionic silver suppressed growth in C. elegans larvae to a greater extent than 10nmAg. Our data suggest that medium‐throughput growth screening and DNA damage analysis along with morphology assessments in C. elegans could together provide powerful tools for rapid toxicity screening of nanomaterials. Published 2013. This article is a US Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.


Analytical Chemistry | 2008

Dynamic Measurement of Altered Chemical Messenger Secretion after Cellular Uptake of Nanoparticles Using Carbon-Fiber Microelectrode Amperometry

Bryce J. Marquis; Adam D. McFarland; Katherine L. Braun; Christy L. Haynes

In this work, carbon-fiber microelectrode amperometry is used to characterize serotonin exocytosis from murine peritoneal mast cells cocultured with fibroblasts in the presence of Au nanoparticles. In the case of mast cell exposure to 1 nM 28 nm diameter spherical Au nanoparticles, there is a decrease of greater than 30% in the number of successful granule transport and fusion events, greater than 30% increase in the rate of intragranular matrix expansion, and greater than 20% increase in the number of secreted serotonin molecules per granule. These results suggest that nanoparticles interrupt the dense-core biopolymer intragranular matrix and present the potential for systematic studies showing how exocytotic function is influenced by nanoparticle size, shape, and composition.


Analyst | 2009

Amperometric assessment of functional changes in nanoparticle-exposed immune cells: varying Au nanoparticle exposure time and concentration

Bryce J. Marquis; Melissa A. Maurer-Jones; Katherine L. Braun; Christy L. Haynes

A mast cell/fibroblast co-culture system is used as a model to assess the toxicity of Au nanoparticles over the course of 72 hours of exposure. Cellular uptake of nanoparticles was found to increase over the 72 hr exposure period and the nanoparticles localized within granular bodies of the primary culture mast cells. These granules were found to increase in volume with the addition of nanoparticles. There was no decrease in viability for 24 hr exposed cells but a slight viability decrease was found after 48 and 72 hr exposure. Carbon-fiber amperometry analysis of exocytosis of serotonin from mast cells revealed changing release profiles over the time course of exposure. In early exposure times, granular secretion of serotonin increased with exposure to Au nanoparticles whereas 72 hr exposure showed decreased secretion of serotonin with nanoparticle exposure. The kinetics of this release was also found to be affected by Au colloid exposure where the rate of serotonin expulsion decreased with increasing nanoparticle exposure. These results illustrate the dynamic nature of nanoparticle-cell interactions and the critical changes in cell behavior even when viability is unaffected.


Nanotoxicology | 2013

NIST gold nanoparticle reference materials do not induce oxidative DNA damage

Bryant C. Nelson; Elijah J. Petersen; Bryce J. Marquis; Donald H. Atha; John T. Elliott; Danielle Cleveland; Stephanie S. Watson; I-Hsiang Tseng; Andrew Dillon; Mellisa L. Theodore; Joany Jackman

Abstract One primary challenge in nanotoxicology studies is the lack of well-characterised nanoparticle reference materials which could be used as positive or negative nanoparticle controls. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has developed three gold nanoparticle (AuNP) reference materials (10, 30 and 60 nm). The genotoxicity of these nanoparticles was tested using HepG2 cells and calf-thymus DNA. DNA damage was assessed based on the specific and sensitive measurement of four oxidatively-modified DNA lesions (8-hydroxy-2´-deoxyguanosine, 8-hydroxy-2´-deoxyadenosine, (5´S)-8,5´-cyclo-2´-deoxyadenosine and (5´R)-8,5´-cyclo-2´-deoxyadenosine) using liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry. Significantly elevated, dose-dependent DNA damage was not detected at concentrations up to 0.2 μg/ml, and free radicals were not detected using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. These data suggest that the NIST AuNPs could potentially serve as suitable negative-control nanoparticle reference materials for in vitro and in vivo genotoxicity studies. NIST AuNPs thus hold substantial promise for improving the reproducibility and reliability of nanoparticle genotoxicity studies.


Applied Spectroscopy | 2008

Recent advances in nanomaterial plasmonics: fundamental studies and applications.

Sara A. Love; Bryce J. Marquis; Christy L. Haynes

The unusual optical properties of noble metal nanoparticles were employed long before scientists could even conceive of nanoscale objects. The Lycurgus Cup, which is part of a collection at the British Museum and was likely made in the 4th century in Rome, is a prime example. The glass portion of this vessel contains both colloidal Au and Ag and, thus, has the unusual property of appearing green when illuminated externally and red when illuminated internally. Similarly, many stained glass windows dating from the Medieval period contain red panels colored by Au colloids and yellow panels colored by Ag colloids, and Cu and Ag colloids were included in ceramic glazes used during the Renaissance period to give art objects an iridescent or metallic sheen. In each of these cases, the artists were capitalizing on the size-dependent optical properties of the noble metal nanoparticles without knowing it. It was Michael Faraday who first recognized that the intensely colored solutions were attributable to ‘‘highly divided’’, or colloidal, Au.1 The phenomenon responsible for the unusual scattering and absorption (extinction) properties of noble metal nanoparticles is the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR); excitation of the LSPR is achieved when the appropriate wavelength of light excites a collective oscillation of the conduction band electrons within a nanostructure. In 1908, Gustav Mie presented an analytical solution to Maxwell’s Equations for the extinction of electromagnetic radiation by a metallic sphere.2 The energy that initiates the LSPR is highly sensitive to the nanostructure’s composition, size, shape, dielectric environment, and spacing as well as the electronwithdrawing or electron-donating character of any chemisorbed species. These dependencies are apparent in Eq. 1, which Mie derived, assuming that the excitation wavelength is large compared to the nanostructure in the electrostatic dipole limit:


Biophysical Chemistry | 2008

The effects of co-culture of fibroblasts on mast cell exocytotic release characteristics as evaluated by carbon-fiber microelectrode amperometry

Bryce J. Marquis; Christy L. Haynes

In this work, carbon-fiber microelectrode amperometry (CFMA) is employed to probe changes in the biophysical mechanism of exocytosis under varied cell culture conditions. Degranulation and serotonin exocytosis from mouse peritoneal mast cells (MPMCs) were measured both without and with co-cultured Swiss-albino 3t3 fibroblasts using CFMA. After 24 h in culture, there are distinct differences in the exocytotic characteristics of MPMCs cultured with and without fibroblast support cells, as detected by CFMA, including an increased number of secreted serotonin molecules, number of granule fusion events, secretion rate, and granule membrane tension. Beyond 48 h in culture, MPMCs cultured alone cannot be analyzed using CFMA due to decreased viability and membrane tension whereas MPMCs co-cultured with fibroblasts were maintained for up to 28 days in culture. Some secretion characteristics evolved over the long-term co-culture but the total amount of serotonin released per cell remained largely constant. This work quantitatively demonstrates that the MPMC/fibroblast co-culture system presents a promising model system for chronic exposure or disease model studies based on CFMA analysis.


Current Developments in Nutrition | 2017

Skeletal Muscle Acute and Chronic Metabolic Response to Essential Amino Acid Supplementation in Hypertriglyceridemic Older Adults

Bryce J. Marquis; Nicholas M. Hurren; Eugénia Carvalho; Il-Young Kim; Scott Schutzler; Gohar Azhar; Robert R. Wolfe; Elisabet Børsheim

Abstract Background: Supplementation with essential amino acids (EAAs) + arginine is a promising nutritional approach to decrease plasma triglyceride (TG) concentrations, which are an independent risk factor for ischemic heart disease. Objective: The objective of this study was to examine the effects of 8 wk of EAA supplementation on skeletal muscle basal metabolite concentrations and changes in metabolic response to acute EAA intake, with an emphasis on mitochondrial metabolism, in adults with elevated TGs to better understand the mechanisms of lowering plasma TGs. Methods: Older adults with elevated plasma TG concentrations were given 22 g EAAs to ingest acutely before and after an 8-wk EAA supplementation period. Skeletal muscle biopsy samples were collected before and after acute EAA intake, both pre- and postsupplementation (4 biopsy samples), and targeted metabolomic analyses of organic acids and acylcarnitines were conducted on the specimens. Results: Acute EAA intake resulted in increased skeletal muscle acylcarnitine concentrations associated with oxidative catabolism of the supplement components, with the largest increases found in acylcarnitines of branched-chain amino acid oxidative catabolism, including isovaleryl-carnitine (2200%) and 2-methylbutyryl-carnitine (2400%). The chronic EAA supplementation resulted in a 19% decrease in plasma TGs along with accumulation of long-chain acylcarnitines myristoyl- (90%) and stearoyl- (120%) carnitine in skeletal muscle and increases in succinyl-carnitine (250%) and the late-stage tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates fumarate (44%) and malate (110%). Conclusions: Supplementation with EAAs shows promise as an approach for moderate reduction in plasma TGs. Changes in skeletal muscle metabolites suggest incomplete fatty acid oxidation and increased anaplerosis, which suggests a potential bottleneck in fatty acid metabolism.

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Bryant C. Nelson

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Sara A. Love

University of Minnesota

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Elijah J. Petersen

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Nicholas Olejnik

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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Pawel Jaruga

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Piper Reid Hunt

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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Robert L. Sprando

Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition

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