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Dive into the research topics where Mark R. Wiesner is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark R. Wiesner.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2009

Towards a definition of inorganic nanoparticles from an environmental, health and safety perspective

Mélanie Auffan; Jérôme Rose; Jean-Yves Bottero; Gregory V. Lowry; Jean-Pierre Jolivet; Mark R. Wiesner

The regulation of engineered nanoparticles requires a widely agreed definition of such particles. Nanoparticles are routinely defined as particles with sizes between about 1 and 100 nm that show properties that are not found in bulk samples of the same material. Here we argue that evidence for novel size-dependent properties alone, rather than particle size, should be the primary criterion in any definition of nanoparticles when making decisions about their regulation for environmental, health and safety reasons. We review the size-dependent properties of a variety of inorganic nanoparticles and find that particles larger than about 30 nm do not in general show properties that would require regulatory scrutiny beyond that required for their bulk counterparts.


Environmental Pollution | 2009

Chemical stability of metallic nanoparticles: a parameter controlling their potential cellular toxicity in vitro.

Mélanie Auffan; Jérôme Rose; Mark R. Wiesner; Jean-Yves Bottero

The level of production of nanoparticles will inevitably lead to their appearance in air, water, soils, and organisms. A theoretical framework that relates properties of nanoparticles to their biological effects is needed to identify possible risks to human health and the environment. This paper considers the properties of dispersed metallic nanoparticles and highlights the relationship between the chemical stability of these nanoparticles and their in vitro toxicity. Analysis of published data suggests that chemically stable metallic nanoparticles have no significant cellular toxicity, whereas nanoparticles able to be oxidized, reduced or dissolved are cytotoxic and even genotoxic for cellular organisms.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

More than the Ions: The Effects of Silver Nanoparticles on Lolium multiflorum

Liyan Yin; Yingwen Cheng; Benjamin Espinasse; Benjamin P. Colman; Mélanie Auffan; Mark R. Wiesner; Jérôme Rose; Jie Liu; Emily S. Bernhardt

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are increasingly used as antimicrobial additives in consumer products and may have adverse impacts on organisms when they inadvertently enter ecosystems. This study investigated the uptake and toxicity of AgNPs to the common grass, Lolium multiflorum. We found that root and shoot Ag content increased with increasing AgNP exposures. AgNPs inhibited seedling growth. While exposed to 40 mg L(-1) GA-coated AgNPs, seedlings failed to develop root hairs, had highly vacuolated and collapsed cortical cells and broken epidermis and rootcap. In contrast, seedlings exposed to identical concentrations of AgNO(3) or supernatants of ultracentrifuged AgNP solutions showed no such abnormalities. AgNP toxicity was influenced by total NP surface area with smaller AgNPs (6 nm) more strongly affecting growth than did similar concentrations of larger (25 nm) NPs for a given mass. Cysteine (which binds Ag(+)) mitigated the effects of AgNO(3) but did not reduce the toxicity of AgNP treatments. X-ray spectro-microscopy documented silver speciation within exposed roots and suggested that silver is oxidized within plant tissues. Collectively, this study suggests that growth inhibition and cell damage can be directly attributed either to the nanoparticles themselves or to the ability of AgNPs to deliver dissolved Ag to critical biotic receptors.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Long-term transformation and fate of manufactured ag nanoparticles in a simulated large scale freshwater emergent wetland.

Gregory V. Lowry; Benjamin Espinasse; Appala Raju Badireddy; Curtis J. Richardson; Brian C. Reinsch; Lee D. Bryant; Audrey J. Bone; Amrika Deonarine; So-Ryong Chae; Mathieu Therezien; Benjamin P. Colman; Heileen Hsu-Kim; Emily S. Bernhardt; Cole W. Matson; Mark R. Wiesner

Transformations and long-term fate of engineered nanomaterials must be measured in realistic complex natural systems to accurately assess the risks that they may pose. Here, we determine the long-term behavior of poly(vinylpyrrolidone)-coated silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) in freshwater mesocosms simulating an emergent wetland environment. AgNPs were either applied to the water column or to the terrestrial soils. The distribution of silver among water, solids, and biota, and Ag speciation in soils and sediment was determined 18 months after dosing. Most (70 wt %) of the added Ag resided in the soils and sediments, and largely remained in the compartment in which they were dosed. However, some movement between soil and sediment was observed. Movement of AgNPs from terrestrial soils to sediments was more facile than from sediments to soils, suggesting that erosion and runoff is a potential pathway for AgNPs to enter waterways. The AgNPs in terrestrial soils were transformed to Ag(2)S (~52%), whereas AgNPs in the subaquatic sediment were present as Ag(2)S (55%) and Ag-sulfhydryl compounds (27%). Despite significant sulfidation of the AgNPs, a fraction of the added Ag resided in the terrestrial plant biomass (~3 wt % for the terrestrially dosed mesocosm), and relatively high body burdens of Ag (0.5-3.3 μg Ag/g wet weight) were found in mosquito fish and chironomids in both mesocosms. Thus, Ag from the NPs remained bioavailable even after partial sulfidation and when water column total Ag concentrations are low (<0.002 mg/L).


Aquatic Toxicology | 2010

Intracellular uptake and associated toxicity of silver nanoparticles in Caenorhabditis elegans

Joel N. Meyer; Christopher A. Lord; Xinyu Y. Yang; Elena A. Turner; Appala Raju Badireddy; Stella M. Marinakos; Ashutosh Chilkoti; Mark R. Wiesner; Mélanie Auffan

Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are frequently used as antimicrobials. While the mechanism(s) by which AgNPs are toxic are unclear, their increasing use raises the concern that release into the environment could lead to environmental toxicity. We characterized the physicochemical behavior, uptake, toxicity (growth inhibition), and mechanism of toxicity of three AgNPs with different sizes and polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) or citrate coatings to the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. We used wild-type (N2) C. elegans and strains expected to be sensitive to oxidative stress (nth-1, sod-2 and mev-1), genotoxins (xpa-1 and nth-1), and metals (mtl-2). Using traditional and novel analytical methods, we observed significant aggregation and extra-organismal dissolution of silver, organismal uptake and, in one case, transgenerational transfer of AgNPs. We also observed growth inhibition by all tested AgNPs at concentrations in the low mg/L levels. A metallothionein-deficient (mtl-2) strain was the only mutant tested that exhibited consistently greater AgNP sensitivity than wild-type. Although all tested AgNPs were internalized (passed cell membranes) in C. elegans, at least part of the toxicity observed was mediated by ionic silver. Finally, we describe a modified growth assay that permits differentiation between direct growth-inhibitory effects and indirect inhibition mediated by toxicity to the food source.


Nanotoxicology | 2011

Ultrasonic dispersion of nanoparticles for environmental, health and safety assessment – issues and recommendations

Julian S. Taurozzi; Vincent A. Hackley; Mark R. Wiesner

Abstract Studies designed to investigate the environmental or biological interactions of nanoscale materials frequently rely on the use of ultrasound (sonication) to prepare test suspensions. However, the inconsistent application of ultrasonic treatment across laboratories, and the lack of process standardization can lead to significant variability in suspension characteristics. At present, there is widespread recognition that sonication must be applied judiciously and reported in a consistent manner that is quantifiable and reproducible; current reporting practices generally lack these attributes. The objectives of the present work were to: (i) Survey potential sonication effects that can alter the physicochemical or biological properties of dispersed nanomaterials (within the context of toxicity testing) and discuss methods to mitigate these effects, (ii) propose a method for standardizing the measurement of sonication power, and (iii) offer a set of reporting guidelines to facilitate the reproducibility of studies involving engineered nanoparticle suspensions obtained via sonication.


Nano Letters | 2008

Antibacterial Activity of Fullerene Water Suspensions (nC60) Is Not Due to ROS-Mediated Damage

Delina Y. Lyon; Lena Brunet; George W. Hinkal; Mark R. Wiesner; Pedro J. J. Alvarez

The cytotoxic and antibacterial properties of nC 60, a buckminsterfullerene water suspension, have been attributed to photocatalytically generated reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, in this work, neither ROS production nor ROS-mediated damage is found in nC 60-exposed bacteria. Furthermore, the colorimetric methods used to evaluate ROS production and damage are confounded by interactions between nC 60 and the reagents, yielding false positives. Instead, we propose that nC 60 exerts ROS-independent oxidative stress, thus reconciling conflicting results in the literature.


Journal of Membrane Science | 1990

Fouling in tangential-flow ultrafiltration: The effect of colloid size and coagulation pretreatment

Véronique Lahoussine-Turcaud; Mark R. Wiesner; Jean-Yves Bottero

Abstract The fouling characteristics of dispersions of dissolved organic materials and colloids are investigated in a series of ultrafiltration experiments. Dispersions of tannic acid, humic acid and kaolin are filtered using a cross-flow hollow fiber module. In some cases these materials are modified through the addition of a polymeric aluminum coagulant. The flux characteristics of these dispersions, ranging in particle size from several nanometer to several hundred micrometer, are in qualitative agreement with theory; particles near 0.2μm in diameter produce rapid fouling, while particles greater than 3 μm in size have little effect on flux. Coagulation of the model dispersions is effective in maintaining membrane flux. However, coagulation pretreatment of Seine River water produced smaller improvements in membrane flux.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Sulfidation of Silver Nanoparticles: Natural Antidote to Their Toxicity

Clément Levard; Ernest M. Hotze; Benjamin P. Colman; Amy L. Dale; Lisa Truong; Xinyao Yang; Audrey J. Bone; Gordon E. Brown; Robert L. Tanguay; Richard T. Di Giulio; Emily S. Bernhardt; Joel N. Meyer; Mark R. Wiesner; Gregory V. Lowry

Nanomaterials are highly dynamic in biological and environmental media. A critical need for advancing environmental health and safety research for nanomaterials is to identify physical and chemical transformations that affect the nanomaterial properties and their toxicity. Silver nanoparticles, one of the most toxic and well-studied nanomaterials, readily react with sulfide to form Ag(0)/Ag2S core-shell particles. Here, we show that sulfidation decreased silver nanoparticle toxicity to four diverse types of aquatic and terrestrial eukaryotic organisms (Danio rerio (zebrafish), Fundulus heteroclitus (killifish), Caenorhabditis elegans (nematode worm), and the aquatic plant Lemna minuta (least duckweed)). Toxicity reduction, which was dramatic in killifish and duckweed even for low extents of sulfidation (about 2 mol % S), is primarily associated with a decrease in Ag(+) concentration after sulfidation due to the lower solubility of Ag2S relative to elemental Ag (Ag(0)). These results suggest that even partial sulfidation of AgNP will decrease the toxicity of AgNPs relative to their pristine counterparts. We also show that, for a given organism, the presence of chloride in the exposure media strongly affects the toxicity results by affecting Ag speciation. These results highlight the need to consider environmental transformations of NPs in assessing their toxicity to accurately portray their potential environmental risks.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

Concurrent aggregation and deposition of TiO2 nanoparticles in a sandy porous media.

Natalia Solovitch; J. Labille; J. Rose; Perrine Chaurand; Daniel Borschneck; Mark R. Wiesner; Jean-Yves Bottero

The possibility of simultaneous particle aggregation and deposition in a porous medium was examined for the case of TiO(2) nanoparticles (NPs). While potential for particle aggregation is typically assumed to be negligible in porous media due to favored interactions with porous media surfaces (collectors), we show that nanoscale particle dimensions may favor aggregation kinetics, thus altering the transport and retention of these materials in saturated porous media. When surface chemistry favors nanoparticle-nanoparticle attachment (alpha(pp)) over nanoparticle-collector attachment (alpha(pc)), the rate of particle aggregation within pores may be comparable to that of deposition at ratios of collector to nanoparticle surface areas as high as 40. Aggregation of NPs in the porous media enhances NP deposition, however aggregates that are not removed will sample a smaller portion of the available pore network within the column due to size exclusion.

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Gregory V. Lowry

Carnegie Mellon University

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So-Ryong Chae

University of Cincinnati

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