Abstract

The safety of metal oxide (MOx) nanoparticles (NPs) has been highly concerned because of their wide application and potential toxicological injury. The safe-by-design strategy is usually developed to make safer MOx NPs based on regulation of their physicochemical properties. In the present study, manganese oxide (Mn3 O4 ) NPs, as a representative of insoluble toxic MOx NPs, are doped with a series of transition metal to regulate their conduction band energy (Ec ) out of biological redox potential range (BRPR) or Fermi energy (Ef ) far away from valence band energy (Ev ), aiming at completely eliminating the toxicity or significantly reducing the toxicity. It is found that all these M-doping cannot move Ec of Mn3 O4 NPs out of the BRPR but zinc (Zn)-, copper (Cu)-, and chromium (Cr)-doping do move Ef far away from Ev , where Zn-doping results in the largest |Ef - Ev | value. Various abiotic, in vitro and in vivo assessments reveal that Zn-, Cu-, and Cr-doped Mn3 O4 NPs can generate lower amount of •OH and trigger weaker injury than Mn3 O4 NPs, where Zn-doped Mn3 O4 NPs show the lowest toxicity. Regulating Ef far away from Ev becomes a feasible safe-by-design approach to achieve safe MOx NPs.

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