Abstract

Simple SummaryCarbon nanotubes are revolutionary materials with applications in a lot of different areas. However, there is a rising concern regarding unlikely toxicity effects these materials may trigger. Due to this, the main aim of this paper is to develop a comprehensive approach to study toxicity effect of carbon nanotubes on the mitochondria F0F1-ATPase. We have employed a combination of experimental and computational study. In so doing, we have combined in vitro inhibition responses in submitochondrial particles with docking elastic network models, fractal surface analysis, and Nano-quantitative structure toxicity relationship models (Nano-QSTR models). Results show that this method may be used for the fast prediction of the nanotoxicity induced by single walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT), avoiding time- and money-consuming techniques, and may open new avenues toward to the better understanding and prediction of new nanotoxicity mechanisms.Single-walled carbon nanotubes can induce mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase nanotoxicity through inhibition. To completely characterize the mechanistic effect triggering the toxicity, we have developed a new approach based on the combination of experimental and computational study, since the use of only one or few techniques may not fully describe the phenomena. To this end, the in vitro inhibition responses in submitochondrial particles (SMP) was combined with docking, elastic network models, fractal surface analysis, and Nano-QSTR models. In vitro studies suggest that inhibition responses in SMP of F0F1-ATPase enzyme were strongly dependent on the concentration assay (from 3 to 5 µg/mL) for both pristine and COOH single-walled carbon nanotubes types (SWCNT). Besides, both SWCNTs show an interaction inhibition pattern mimicking the oligomycin A (the specific mitochondria F0F1-ATPase inhibitor blocking the c-ring F0 subunit). Performed docking studies denote the best crystallography binding pose obtained for the docking complexes based on the free energy of binding (FEB) fit well with the in vitro evidence from the thermodynamics point of view, following an affinity order such as: FEB (oligomycin A/F0-ATPase complex) = −9.8 kcal/mol > FEB (SWCNT-COOH/F0-ATPase complex) = −6.8 kcal/mol ~ FEB (SWCNT-pristine complex) = −5.9 kcal/mol, with predominance of van der Waals hydrophobic nano-interactions with key F0-ATPase binding site residues (Phe 55 and Phe 64). Elastic network models and fractal surface analysis were performed to study conformational perturbations induced by SWCNT. Our results suggest that interaction may be triggering abnormal allosteric responses and signals propagation in the inter-residue network, which could affect the substrate recognition ligand geometrical specificity of the F0F1-ATPase enzyme in order (SWCNT-pristine > SWCNT-COOH). In addition, Nano-QSTR models have been developed to predict toxicity induced by both SWCNTs, using results of in vitro and docking studies. Results show that this method may be used for the fast prediction of the nanotoxicity induced by SWCNT, avoiding time- and money-consuming techniques. Overall, the obtained results may open new avenues toward to the better understanding and prediction of new nanotoxicity mechanisms, rational drug design-based nanotechnology, and potential biomedical application in precision nanomedicine.

Highlights

  • The coupled mechanical co-rotating between the γ and ε subunits that form the mitochondrial F1-ATP synthase favors the H+ protons flux necessary for ATP synthesis in all eukaryotic cells [1,2]

  • Several chemical agents have shown a high affinity/selectivity by the bioenergetic mechanisms based on ATP hydrolysis, nanoparticle-based single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), which have been studied by their selective nanotoxicity effects on mitochondria [7,8,9,10]

  • We hypothesize that SWCNT-pristine could act by mimicking the pharmacodynamic behavior of the Oligomycin A, which is the specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial ATP-hydrolysis that modulates the activity of the c-ring-F0-ATP hydrolase subunit

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Summary

Introduction

The coupled mechanical co-rotating between the γ and ε subunits that form the mitochondrial F1-ATP synthase (complex V) favors the H+ protons flux necessary for ATP synthesis in all eukaryotic cells [1,2]. This mechanistic knowledge could be very useful to implement strategies on the named “precision mitochondrial nanomedicine” to improve selectivity for the treatment of brain, cardiac diseases, and cancer using the mitotropic behavior of SWCNT to address active pharmacological principles as new targeting of the mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase [9,10,11,12,13,14] In this context, we hypothesize that SWCNT-pristine could act by mimicking the pharmacodynamic behavior of the Oligomycin A, which is the specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial ATP-hydrolysis that modulates the activity of the c-ring-F0-ATP hydrolase subunit. In the case of the SWCNT-COOH, the F0-ATPase binding interaction could be more attenuated by the presence of the carboxyl group

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