Cerium dioxide, a Jekyll and Hyde nanomaterial, can increase basal and decrease elevated inflammation and oxidative stress.
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Abstract |
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It was hypothesized that the catalyst nanoceria can increase inflammation/oxidative stress from the basal and reduce it from the elevated state. Macrophages clear nanoceria. To test the hypothesis, M0 (non-polarized), M1- (classically activated, pro-inflammatory), and M2-like (alternatively activated, regulatory phenotype) RAW 264.7 macrophages were nanoceria exposed. Inflammatory responses were quantified by IL-1β level, arginase activity, and RT-qPCR and metabolic changes and oxidative stress by the mito and glycolysis stress tests (MST and GST). Morphology was determined by light microscopy, macrophage phenotype marker expression, and a novel three-dimensional immunohistochemical method. Nanoceria blocked IL-1β and arginase effects, increased M0 cell OCR and GST toward the M2 phenotype and altered multiple M1- and M2-like cell endpoints toward the M0 level. M1-like cells had greater volume and less circularity/roundness. M2-like cells had greater volume than M0 macrophages. The results are overall consistent with the hypothesis. |
Year of Publication |
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2022
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Journal |
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Nanomedicine : nanotechnology, biology, and medicine
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Volume |
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43
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Number of Pages |
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102565
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ISSN Number |
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1549-9634
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URL |
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https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1549-9634(22)00051-X
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DOI |
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10.1016/j.nano.2022.102565
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Short Title |
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Nanomedicine
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