Grantee Research Project Results
2015 Progress Report: Transatlantic Initiative for Nanotechnology and the Environment
EPA Grant Number: R834574Title: Transatlantic Initiative for Nanotechnology and the Environment
Investigators: Bertsch, Paul M. , Dorey, Robert A , Rocks, Sophie A , McNear, David H. , Unrine, Jason M. , Wiesner, Mark R. , Lowry, Gregory V. , Tsyusko, Olga V. , Neal, Andy , Jefferson, Bruce , Svendsen, Claus , Spurgeon, David , Casman, Elizabeth , Zhang, Hao , Harris, J. , Liu, Jie , Ritz, Karl , Kabengi, Nadine , McGrath, Steve , Lofts, Steve
Institution: University of Kentucky , Carnegie Mellon University , Lancaster University , Cranfield University , Centre for Ecology and Hydrology , Duke University , Rothamsted Research
Current Institution: University of Kentucky , Carnegie Mellon University , Centre for Ecology and Hydrology , Cranfield University , Duke University , Lancaster University , Rothamsted Research
EPA Project Officer: Aja, Hayley
Project Period: August 1, 2010 through September 30, 2014 (Extended to June 30, 2016)
Project Period Covered by this Report: August 1, 2014 through July 31,2015
Project Amount: $2,000,000
RFA: Environmental Behavior, Bioavailability and Effects of Manufactured Nanomaterials - Joint US – UK Research Program (2009) RFA Text | Recipients Lists
Research Category: Chemical Safety for Sustainability
Objective:
We have developed a life cycle perspective inspired conceptual model (CM) that suggests the importance of terrestrial ecosystems as a major repository of ZnO, TiO2, and Ag manufactured nanomaterials (MNMs) introduced via the land application of MNM-containing biosolids. In this project, we are investigating the transport, fate, behavior, bioavailability, and effects of MNMs in(to) agroecosystems under environmentally realistic scenarios organized around three key hypotheses: Hypothesis (H1) Surface chemistry is the primary factor influencing the fate and transport of MNMs in the terrestrial environment as well as the bioavailability and effects to biological receptors; Hypothesis (H2) Once released to the environment, pristine MNM surfaces will be modified by interactions with organic and inorganic ligands (macromolecules) or via other biogeochemical transformations (aging effects forming a-MNMs); Hypothesis (H3) Ecoreceptors will respond to interactions with pristine metal and metal oxide MNMs, a-MNMs, and/or dissolved constituent metal ions and bulk oxides by specific ecological and toxicogenomic responses that will reflect their combined effects. The overall objectives are to: (1) compare the transport, fate, behavior, bioavailability, and effects of MNMs, a- MNMs, and/or dissolved free metals/bulk oxides to organisms with key terrestrial ecosystem functions, as well as exposure pathways involving humans; (2) determine MNM, surface modified MNM and a-MNM interactions with important biological targets relevant to the BLM and pBRM models and relate these interactions to physicochemical properties; (3) validate models with information generated from experiments designed to address 1 for MNMs introduced through a pilot scale Waste Water Treatment Process (WWTP) to key terrestrial ecoreceptors, including effects of MNMs on the WWTP itself; (4) determine realistic MNM emission scenarios for Tier 1 MNMs in wastewater from the WWT pilot plant data and develop first generation Life-Cycle-Analysis-inspired Risk Assessment (LCA-RA) model components for terrestrial effects of Tier 1 MNMs and a-MNMS based on data generated in experiments designed to address 1, 2, and 3; and (5) provide tools for in situ detection, monitoring, and characterization of pristine MNMs and a-MNMs in environmental media and biota.
Progress Summary:
Toxicity and bioavailability of nano and bulk metals in fresh and aged sewage sludge biosolids mixtures to Medicago truncatula and Sinorhizobium melliloti (UKY): During this reporting period, we completed a series of major pot experiments investigating the toxicity of the nano-metal and bulk metal spiked sewage sludge biosolids to the model legume Medicago truncatula and Sinorhizobium melliloti. The sewage sludge biosolids were generated at a pilot wastewater treatment plant facility at Cranfield University. We published a paper detailing the speciation of metals in the biosolids as measured using synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) as received and after composting (Ma et al., 2013). These results suggested no difference in the speciation of the nano and bulk metals as measured by XAS. The first experiments included exposures to fresh sewage sludge biosolids mixtures containing 50% sewage sludge (simulating 10 years of sludge application) mixed with a natural sandy loam soil from the United Kingdom. These mixtures had a very high salinity so that even the control soil/sludge mixtures did not support adequate plant growth. Subsequent experiments were performed on 25% sludge 75% biosolids mixtures (simulating 5 years of application). Relatively minor effects on plant growth were noted in both the nano and bulk treatments; however, none of the plants nodulated. The next round of experiments focused on the 50% sludge/soil mixture after leaching in outdoor lysimiters at Rothamstead Research in the United Kingdom for 6 months. These mixtures appeared to have lower salinity, perhaps more reflective of actual field exposures which would be subject to leaching. In this experiment we noted a complete inhibition of nodulation of Medicago in the nano treatment, but not in the control and bulk treatments. These differences were explained by increased uptake of Zn from the nano amended biosolids. The results from this study was published during the reporting period (Judy et al., 2015) We have also completed transcriptomic analysis of the plants from the leached sewage sludge biosolids mixtures where we observed differences in nodulation between the nano and bulk metal treatments. There were 1,032 differentially expressed genes in the nano treatment shoots that were not expressed in the bulk treatment and 2261 in the roots. Many of the differentially expressed genes in the nano treatment were involved in flavonoid biosynthesis, which controls signaling of rhizobia for nodulation as well as the nodulation genes themselves. The bulk treatment had more differentially expressed genes in common with the control treatment (Figure 1). These differences in toxicity and gene expression are correlated with greater uptake of Zn from the soil sludge mixtures into plant shoots. There were no differences in metal bioaccumulation observed for Ti or Ag. In addition, phospholipid fatty acid analyses conducted at U. Ky. indicate that the soil microbial communities were distinct among the treatments. Overall the transcriptomic data reinforced the conclusion that increased Zn uptake in the nano treated plants was responsible for toxicity (Chen et al., 2015).
Similar experiments conducted with the earthworm E. fetida using the same leached sewage sludge biosolids mixtures at the Center for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH) in the United Kingdom concluded that the toxicity of the nano biosolids was greater than the bulk biosolids supporting the above findings (Lahive et al., in prep). The coherence of all of these observations is beginning to suggest that the U.S. biosolids application regulations (CFR 40 part 503) may not be protective for nanomaterials. The level of protection of these regulations for nanomaterials should be investigated further. Currently we are analyzing data from a pot experiment with M. truncatula where we diluted the metal dosed biosolids/soil mixtures with control biosolid/soil mixture.
Bioavailability and toxicity of Ag and ZnO NPs and selected transformed (weathered) MNMs to C. elegans (UKY). Ongoing studies of pristine and aged (fully suflidized) Ag NPs in C. elegans are complete and the first manuscript describing these results are accepted for publication Starnes et al., (2014), Starnes et al, (2015). The results indicated that there are particle specific effects and that the relative importance of Ag ions as a contributor to toxicity decreases with increasing Ag concentration. The results of imaging and toxicogenomic studies suggested that toxicity of pristine and aged Ag NPs differs from each other and from Ag ions. The mechanism of fully sulfidized Ag NP toxicity is likely related to damage to the cuticle. We have now completed whole genome gene expression profiling of pristine and sulfidized Ag NPs. Little overlap between differentially expressed genes in the pristine, sulfidized and Ag ion treatments suggested distinct modes of toxicity. The importance of several of the differentially expressed genes was investigated using RNA interference and knock out strains (Starnes et al., 2015). Similar exposures were conducted with sulfide aged, phosphate aged and pristine ZnO nanomaterials. While differences in toxicity were observed, with the aged materials being about 10 times less toxic than the pristine materials, we found that Zn ions were the main driver of toxicity. Interestingly the dissolution did not occur in the exposure medium but rather within the C. elegans gut and cells. Overall our studies indicate significant differences in the toxicity pathways between nano and bulk metals and that the CFR40 Part 503 regulations are not necessarily protective for nano-metals. However, transformations that occur during wastewater treatment greatly decrease the toxicity of as synthesized nanomaterials. Studies at currently environmentally relevant concentrations were conducted and showed no adverse effects on microbial communities or on legume-rhizobia symbiosis. This study is being prepared for submission (Chen et al., in prep).
Exposure Modeling (CMU and Duke)
We have developed a 1-dimensional mass balance diagenetic model of the sulfide- and oxygen-dependent chemical transformations of AgNPs in sediments Results show that the relative abundance of the toxic species Ag+ is extremely low (< 0.01 wt-%), and that environmental conditions play an important role in AgNP fate. The half-life of sulfidized AgNPs can vary from 6.6 years to over a century depending on oxygen availability in the sediments (Dale et al., 2014) A watershed-scale model whose backbone is a hybrid of the EPA models HSPF and WASP7 is near completion. This model simulates watershed hydrology and agricultural practices, including biosolids application to crop lands and runoff to stream during storms, and has capabilities necessary to track point- and non-point nanoparticle sources, sinks, advection, and transformations in the environment. This model was the result of a collaboration with the EPA Chesapeake Bay Program. A WWTP model was completed for Ag, ZnO, and TiO2 using transformation data gathered and experimental distribution data. In addition, work has been completed to investigate the transformations and distribution of CeO2 as a function of coating. These papers have now been published (Money et al., 2014; Barton et al., 2014a, 2014b).
Journal Articles on this Report : 10 Displayed | Download in RIS Format
Other project views: | All 69 publications | 39 publications in selected types | All 39 journal articles |
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Barton LE, Auffan M, Durenkamp M, McGrath S, Bottero J-Y, Wiesner MR. Monte Carlo simulations of the transformation and removal of Ag, TiO2, and ZnO nanoparticles in wastewater treatment and land application of biosolids. Science of the Total Environment 2015;511:535-543. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Barton LE, Auffan M, Olivi L, Bottero JY, Wiesner MR. Heteroaggregation, transformation and fate of CeO2 nanoparticles in wastewater treatment. Environmental Pollution 2015;203:122-129. |
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Chen C, Unrine JM, Judy JD, Lewis RW, Guo J, McNear Jr. DH, Tsyusko OV. Toxicogenomic responses of the model legume Medicago truncatula to aged biosolids containing a mixture of nanomaterials (TiO2, Ag, and ZnO) from a pilot wastewater treatment plant. Environmental Science & Technology 2015;49(14):8759-8768. |
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Dale AL, Lowry GV, Casman EA. Much ado about α: reframing the debate over appropriate fate descriptors in nanoparticle environmental risk modeling. Environmental Science: Nano 2015;2(1):27-32. |
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Dale AL, Lowry GV, Casman EA. Stream dynamics and chemical transformations control the environmental fate of silver and zinc oxide nanoparticles in a watershed-scale model. Environmental Science & Technology 2015;49(12):7285-7293. |
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Dale AL, Casman EA, Lowry GV, Lead JR, Viparelli E, Baalousha M. Modeling nanomaterial environmental fate in aquatic systems. Environmental Science & Technology 2015;49(5):2587-2593. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Hendren CO, Lowry GV, Unrine JM, Wiesner MR. A functional assay-based strategy for nanomaterial risk forecasting. Science of the Total Environment 2015;536:1029-1037. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Judy JD, McNear Jr. DH, Chen C, Lewis RW, Tsyusko OV, Bertsch PM, Rao W, Stegemeier J, Lowry GV, McGrath SP, Durenkamp M, Unrine JM. Nanomaterials in biosolids inhibit nodulation, shift microbial community composition, and result in increased metal uptake relative to bulk/dissolved metals. Environmental Science & Technology 2015;49(14):8751-8758. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Starnes DL, Unrine JM, Starnes CP, Collin BE, Oostveen EK, Ma R, Lowry GV, Bertsch PM, Tsyusko OV. Impact of sulfidation on the bioavailability and toxicity of silver nanoparticles to Caenorhabditis elegans. Environmental Pollution 2015;196:239-246. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Stegemeier JP, Schwab F, Colman BP, Webb SM, Newville M, Lanzirotti A, Winkler C, Wiesner MR, Lowry GV. Speciation matters: bioavailability of silver and silver sulfide nanoparticles to alfalfa (Medicago sativa). Environmental Science & Technology 2015;49(14):8451-8460. |
R834574 (2015) R834574 (Final) |
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Supplemental Keywords:
Environmental nanotechnology, nanotoxicology, environmental chemistry, ecological and human health risks of manufactured nanomaterials, chemical speciation, biosensors, environmental chemistry, biogeochemistryProgress and Final Reports:
Original AbstractThe perspectives, information and conclusions conveyed in research project abstracts, progress reports, final reports, journal abstracts and journal publications convey the viewpoints of the principal investigator and may not represent the views and policies of ORD and EPA. Conclusions drawn by the principal investigators have not been reviewed by the Agency.
Project Research Results
- Final Report
- 2014 Progress Report
- 2013 Progress Report
- 2012 Progress Report
- 2011 Progress Report
- Original Abstract
39 journal articles for this project