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Gastrointestinal Absorption and Toxicity of Nanoparticles and Microparticles: Myth, Reality and Pitfalls explored through Titanium Dioxide

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Silva, ABD 
Miniter, M 
Thom, WD 
Hewitt, RE 

Abstract

Daily oral exposure to vast numbers (>1013/adult/day) of micron or nano-sized persistent particles has become the norm for many populations. Significant airborne particle exposure is deleterious, so what about ingestion? Titanium dioxide in food grade form (fgTiO2) , which is an additive to some foods, capsules, tablets and toothpaste, may provide clues. Certainly, exposed human populations accumulate these particles in specialised intestinal cells at the base of large lymphoid follicles (Peyer’s patches) and it’s likely that a degree of absorption goes beyond this- i.e. lymphatics to blood circulation to tissues. We critically review the evidence and pathways. Regarding potential adverse effects, our primary message, for today’s state-of-art, is that in vivo models have not been good enough and at times woeful. We provide a ‘caveats list’ to improve approaches and experimentation and illustrate why studies on biomarkers of particle uptake, and lower gut /mesenteric lymph nodes as targets, should be prioritized.

Description

Keywords

Peyer’s patch, absorption, gastrointestinal, nanoparticle, particle, titanium dioxide

Journal Title

Current Opinion in Toxicology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2468-2020
2468-2020

Volume Title

19

Publisher

Elsevier

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MR/R005699/1)
Medical Research Council [grant number MR/R005699/1], Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education - CAPES [grant number 88881.127953/2016-01], Girton College and the University of Cambridge Herchel-Smith Fellowships