Some Peculiarities in the Dose Dependence of Separate and Combined In Vitro Cardiotoxicity Effects Induced by CdS and PbS Nanoparticles With Special Attention to Hormesis Manifestations
Vladimir Panov,
Ilzira Minigalieva,
Tatiana Bushueva,
Eleonore Fröhlich,
Claudia Meindl,
Markus Absenger-Novak,
Vladimir Shur,
Ekaterina Shishkina,
Vladimir Gurvich,
Larisa Privalova,
Boris A. Katsnelson
Affiliations
Vladimir Panov
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Ilzira Minigalieva
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Tatiana Bushueva
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Eleonore Fröhlich
Center for Medical Research of the Medical University of Graz, Austria
Claudia Meindl
Center for Medical Research of the Medical University of Graz, Austria
Markus Absenger-Novak
Center for Medical Research of the Medical University of Graz, Austria
Vladimir Shur
School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, the Ural Federal University, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Ekaterina Shishkina
School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, the Ural Federal University, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Vladimir Gurvich
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Larisa Privalova
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Boris A. Katsnelson
Medical Research Center for Prophylaxis and Health Protection in Industrial Workers, Ekaterinburg, Russia
Spherical nanoparticles (NPs) of cadmium and lead sulfides (diameter 37 ± 5 and 24 ± 4 nm, respectively) have been found to be cytotoxic for HL-1 cardiomyocytes as evidenced by decrease in adenosine triphosphate–dependent luminescence. Cadmium sulfide (CdS)-NPs were discovered to produce a much greater cytotoxic impact than lead sulphide (PbS)-NP. Given the same dose range, CdS-NP reduced the number of calcium spikes. A similar effect was observed for small doses of PbS-NP. In addition to cell hypertrophy under the impact of certain doses of CdS-NP and PbS-NP, doses causing cardiomyocyte size reduction were identified. For these 3 outcomes, we obtained both monotonic “dose–response” functions (well approximated by the hyperbolic function) and different variants of non-monotonic ones for which we found adequate mathematical expressions by modifying certain models of hormesis available in the literature. Data analysis using a response surface linear model with a cross-term provided new support to the previously established postulate that a diversity of types of joint action characteristic of one and the same pair of damaging agents is one of the important assertions of the general theory of combined toxicity.