| Literature DB >> 25234085 |
Toktam Nezakati1, Brian G Cousins, Alexander M Seifalian.
Abstract
This review article aims to provide an overview of chemically modified graphene, and graphene oxide (GO), and their impact on toxicology when present in biological systems. Graphene is one of the most promising nanomaterials due to unique physicochemical properties including enhanced optical, thermal, and electrically conductive behavior in addition to mechanical strength and high surface-to-volume ratio. Graphene-based nanomaterials have received much attention over the last 5 years in the biomedical field ranging from their use as polymeric conduits for nerve regeneration, carriers for targeted drug delivery and in the treatment of cancer via photo-thermal therapy. Both in vitro and in vivo biological studies of graphene-based nanomaterials help understand their relative toxicity and biocompatibility when used for biomedical applications. Several studies investigating important material properties such as surface charge, concentration, shape, size, structural defects, and chemical functional groups relate to their safety profile and influence cyto- and geno-toxicology. In this review, we highlight the most recent studies of graphene-based nanomaterials and outline their unique properties, which determine their interactions under a range of environmental conditions. The advent of graphene technology has led to many promising new opportunities for future applications in the field of electronics, biotechnology, and nanomedicine to aid in the diagnosis and treatment of a variety of debilitating diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25234085 PMCID: PMC4201927 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-014-1361-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153
Fig. 1Graphene is a 2D building material for allotropes of carbon nanomaterials. It can be wrapped up into 0D buckyball, rolled into a 1D nanotube, or stacked into 3D graphite (Geim and Novoselov 2007)
Fig. 2Bottom-up fabrication, by chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
Fig. 3Top-down fabrication, solution based on Hummer’s method using ultrasonication
Fig. 4Schematic diagram of the procedure for GO–PEI–UNCP: Numbers of core-shell structured UCNPs covalently grafted with GO through polyethylenimine for advanced imaging, drug delivery, and photo-thermal therapy
Fig. 5Toxicology of graphene: An overview on the principal components of graphene toxicity
Fig. 6Distribution of graphene in the body
Summary of in vitro study of functionalized graphene oxide toxicity reviewed
| Functionalization | Cell line/animal model | Concentration and duration | Summary results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GO | A549 | 0, 10, 25, 50, 100, 200 μg/mL, 24 h | GO hardly enters cells and shows good biocompatibility, dose and size related | Chang et al. ( |
| Chitosan-GO | MC3T3-E1 mouse pre-osteoblast cell line | CS-1 wt% GO, CS-3 wt% GO, 14 days | GO into a CS network favorably modulated the biological response of osteoblasts, such that cell attachment, proliferation, and growth were significantly enhanced | Depan et al. ( |
| GO/TiO2 | HeLa | 25, 50, 75, 100 μg/mL, 20 min | GOT caused antioxidant enzyme activities reduction and various apoptotic events in HeLa cell line, and induced apoptotic death | Hu et al. ( |
| GO/DOX gel | human nasopharyngeal carcinoma CNE1 cells | 6 mg/mL GO 4, 2, 1 mg/mL DOX, 14 days | The gel exhibited good injectability, particularly in the case of higher amounts of GO or DOX. The in situ encapsulated DOX showed a sustained release behavior and antitumor efficacy | Ma et al. ( |
| HB-GO | HeLa, SMMC-7721, SGC-7901, A549 | HB–GO (2:1), HB–GO (1:1) | The active uptake of HB–GO into tumor cells and significant damage to such impregnated cells was observed upon irradiation | Zhou et al. ( |
| RGO/Gel | rabbit’s fibroblast cells | 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, and 0.7 wt | RGO had no negative effect on cell growth, so the RGO/gel composite may be a promising biomaterial, with good cell compatibility | Wang et al. ( |
| MB/GO | DNA | The treated DNA increased the quenching efficiency of GO on MB compared to intact target DNA, indicating that all of them exert damage effect on DNA | Zhou et al. ( | |
| GO | Mice fibroblast cells line L929 | 100 μg/mL, 48 h | Materials show relatively good cyto-compatibility, the degree depends on the concentration and type of dispersant | Wojtoniszak et al. ( |
| LP-GO | HEK293 and HeLa cells | 0.1 mg/mL | Efficiently condensed pDNA and delivered it to the insides of the cells. LP-GO-2 showed the capability to deliver siRNA efficiently into the cells | Tripathi et al. ( |
| GO | MG-63 cells | 25, 50, 100, 200 μg/mL, 14 days | GO shows non-uniformity in size and shape of its particles and size variation hamper the transfection of nanocomposite into the cells | Deepachitra et al. ( |
| PEI-GO/PEI-GO–UCNP | MCF-7/Kun Ming Mouse | 10, 20, 40, 60, 80 μg/mL, 48 h | Efficient, versatile PEI-GO–UCNP with up-conversion luminescence exhibited high drug loading efficiency and controlled release of DOX to kill cancer cells | Yan et al. ( |
| GO | Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells | 0, 0.4, 4, 40, 400 μg/mL, 24 h | With Vpr13-33, giving rise to the transition in conformation, morphology and dimension changes of aggregates, and reduced cytotoxicity of Vpr13-33 | Zhang et al. ( |
| GO | Mouse skeletal myoblasts C2C12 | 1.5 mg/mL, 24 h | The enhanced cellular behavior on graphene derivatives was attributed to surface roughness and surface oxygen content that influences the adsorption of serum proteins | Ku and Park ( |
| GNPs on ITO | NE-4C neuroectodermal stem cells | 275 mg/l | Very effective for in situ monitoring of the undifferentiated and differentiated state of stem cells | Kim et al. ( |
| GO | Mouse peritoneal macrophages | 0, 1, 5, 10, 50 μg/mL, 24 h | Potential toxic mechanism of carbon nanomaterials and suggest caution on their utilization | Wan et al. ( |
| GO | PMEFs | 0, 20, 40, 60, 80, 100 μg/mL, 24 h | M-rGO shows significant biocompatibility than GO at higher concentrations | Gurunathan et al. ( |
| FA–NGO–PVP | Hela, A549 | 0, 30, 60, 100 μg/mL, 72 h | Cellular uptake demonstrated internalization of FA–NGO–PVP into tumor cells via receptor-mediated endocytosis and exhibited the cytotoxicity to Hela | Qin et al. ( |
| GO, LA-PEG-GO | HLF cells | 1, 50, 100 μg/mL, 24 h | DNA damage induced by LA-PEG modified GO was mild compared with that induced by other GO derivatives | Wang et al. ( |
| GO |
| 0, 25, 50, 75, 100, 125, 150 mg/mL, 4 h | Antibacterial activities are time and concentration dependent; the bacterial cell death may be due to oxidative stress and leads to DNA fragmentation | Gurunathan et al. ( |
Summary of in vivo study of functionalized graphene oxide toxicity reviewed
| Functionalization | Cell line/animal model | Concentration and duration | Summary results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 188Re-GO | Male Kun Ming Mice 20 ± 2 g, 6–8 weeks | 1 and 10 mg/mL | High values of %ID/g in urine within 12 h | Zhang et al. ( |
| NGO-PEG-DOX | EMT6 cell/20 Balb/c female mice 6–8 weeks | 24 μg/mL, 24 h/200 μL, 10 mg/kg, 7 days | Complete destruction of the tumors without weight loss or recurrence of tumors | Zhang et al. ( |
| 66Ga-NOTA-GO-TRC105 | 4T1, MCF-7, endothelial cells | 50 μg/mL, 24 h | Tumor targeting of NOTA-GO-TRC105 was vasculature specific with little extravasation | Hong et al. ( |
| GO/pGO | 5 weeks female Balb/c mice,7 weeks female C3H/HeN mice | 10,20,40 μg/mL, 24 h | pGO accumulated to the tumor tissues, and systemic pGO nanoparticle-based co-delivery of Ce6 with DOX improved the efficacy of PDT | Miao et al. ( |
| GO-IONP-Au-PEG | 4T1, human carcinoma KB cells | 0. 0.625, 1.25, 2, 5, 5, 10 μg/mL, 18 days | Could serve as a photo-thermal agent for PTT cancer cell killing under molecular targeting or magnetic targeting shows excellent tumor ablation therapeutic efficacy | Shi et al. ( |
| GO | Male athymic nude mice (CAnN.CgFoxn1nu/CrljOri, 6 weeks old) | 0,10,25,50 μg/mL, 80 h | Pluronic-coated nanoGO efficiently showed an enhanced anticancer effect by combined PDT–PTT effect and exhibited high accumulation in tumor tissue | Sahu et al. ( |
Fig. 7a–i Fluorescence micrographs illustrating the proliferation of pre-osteoblasts on pure CS and CS–GO scaffolds at similar locations (e.g., the center) after 7 and 28 days, respectively (Depan et al. 2011)
Fig. 8Biodistribution and clearance of NGS-PEG. a Time-dependent biodistribution of 125I-NGS-PEG in female Bal b/c mice. b 125I-NGS-PEG levels in the liver and spleen over time. c–e H&E stained liver slices from the untreated control mice (c) and NGS-PEG injected mice at 3 days (d) and 20 days (e) p.i. Brown-black spots which could be clearly differentiated from the blue-stained cell nuclei were noted in the liver of mice 3 days after injection of graphene. Much less black spots in the liver were observed 20 days later. f Statistic of black spot numbers in liver slices at various time post-injection of NGS-PEG. Numbers of spots in full image fields under a ×20 objective were averaged over 5 images at each data point. g 125I-NGS-PEG levels in urine and feces in the first week after injection. Mouse excretions were collected by metabolism cages. Error bars in the above data were based on standard deviations of 4–5 mice per group (Yang et al. 2011a, b)
Summary of in vitro study of functionalized graphene toxicity reviewed
| Functionalization | Cell line/animal model | Concentration and duration | Summary results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| G | human glioma cell line U251 | 2.5–10 μg/mL, 24 h | Better photo-thermal efficiency of graphene, due to dispersibility/smaller size of graphene, is superior to that of its structural sibling | Markovic et al. ( |
| PTCA/CCG | HeLa, MDA-MB-231, K562 cells, NIH3T3 | 100 μg/mL, 72 h | Apta-sensor has the ability to differentiate cancer cells and normal ones and can be regenerated using AS1411 cDNA and reusable for cancer cell detection | Feng et al. ( |
| G | Hippocampus | 100 μg/mL, 7 days | Biocompatible and capable of promoting neurite sprouting and outgrowth, during the early developmental phase | Li et al. ( |
| PGE/Graphene | HRP/DNA | 1 μg/mL, 24 h | Glycidamide could induce more serious DNA damage than acrylamide | Qiu et al. ( |
| G | Human hepatoma HepG2 | 1 μg/mL, 48 h | iTRAQ-coupled 2D LC–MS/MS proteome analysis is effective to the cellular functions in response to nanomaterials. | Yuan et al. ( |
| G/GO | Mouse iPSCs cell line 20D17 | 1.5 mg/mL, 9 days | Allow for attachment, proliferate on and differential differentiation of iPSCs and promise for iPSCs | Chen et al. ( |
| G | RAW 264.7 | 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, 100 μg/mL, 48 h | Graphene induce cytotoxicity and increase intracellular reactive oxygen species, and then trigger apoptosis by activation of the mitochondrial pathway | Li et al. ( |
| rGONPs | hMSCs | 0.01–100 μg/mL, 24 h | The size- and concentration-dependent cytotoxicity of the graphene oxide sheets and nanoplatelets in the hMSCs were studied | Akhavan et al. ( |
| G | hESC lines H9 from WiCell | 0, 10, 25, 50 g/l, 7 days | Neuronal differentiation circumvents cytotoxicity and may potentially be developed into 3D AC-collagen structures, further enhancing cellular functionalization | Chen et al. ( |
| rGO/GO | A549, RAW 264.7 | 200 μg/mL, 5 days | An important parameter determining the biological effects of rGO/GO | Horváth et al. ( |
| N/graphene | L929 cell line, EAHY926 cell line | 100 μg/mL, 7 days | The blood assays indicate that N/graphene has slightly lower platelet adhesion and prolonged kinetic blood-clotting time than pristine graphene | Guo et al. ( |
| O-GNR coated with PEG-DSPE | HeLa, mouse fibroblast cells, SKBR3, MCF7 | 10, 50, 100, 200, 300, 400 μg/mL, 48 h | The higher uptake indicates that O-GNR-PEG-DSPEs have a dose, and time-dependent, and differential cytotoxic effects on the four cell lines | Mullick Chowdhury et al. ( |
| G | T87 | 0, 40, 60 mg/l, 72 h | Graphene induced necrosis in T87 cells by interfering with the morphology, plasma membrane disturbances, and mitochondrial dysfunction | Begum and Fugetsu ( |
| rGO/QC-PEG | KB cancer cell line | 0.5, 1, 10 μg/mL, 72 h | Due to introduction of Plu-SH, the created space between rGO/QC-PEG plate and Plu-SH polymer aids to entrap more DOX or QDs enabling to show more drug loading efficiency and fluorescence | Al-Nahain et al. ( |
| G/Nafion | HeLa | 100 μg/mL, 24 h | Excellent electrochemical sensing capability with good sensitivity, linearity of response, and bioaffinity | Yoon et al. ( |
| PLA/GNP | Mouse embryo fibroblasts 3T3 (ATCC CCL-164) | 1, 5, 10 μg/mL, 72 h | No considerable variation in cell proliferation at the surface of the films was observed, except those containing GO after 24 h | Pinto et al. ( |
| G | PANC-1 | G Film, 24 h | Hard corona on the surface of graphene substrates can evolve significantly as one passes from protein concentrations | Mao et al. ( |
| G | HT29, SW48 tumor cell lines | 3 mg/l, 20 min | Polyphenol groups attached to rGO during reduction process are well selective binding agents to cancer cell surfaces | Abdolahad et al. ( |
| Gelatin-GNS | A549 | 5, 10, 50, 100, 150, 200, 300 μg/mL, 48 h | Gelatin-GNS showed excellent dispersibility and stability in distilled water and various physiological solutions, also exhibited a high drug loading capacity of MTX | An et al. ( |
| CRGO-COOH | Mouse prostate cancer cell line, TRAMP-C1 | 25 μg/mL, 180 h | UniformLy dispersed thermo-sensitive CGN, which displayed high photo-thermal properties and reversible dramatic size reduction with temperature increase | Wang et al. ( |
| G-PEG | Phagocytic cells | 10 μg/mL | GNMs to improve their dispersion in aqueous solutions for biomedical applications | Yang et al. ( |
| G | HeLa cells | 3 mg/Ml | These results demonstrate the importance of size-dependent graphene nanoflake toxicity | Yoon et al. ( |
Fig. 9Hematological results from blood pressure and echocardiography measurements 10 min and 2 h post-injection of GNP-Dex (doses: 1–500 mg/kg). a Blood pressure, b heart rate, c respiration rate, d atrioventricular mean blood velocity, e % ejection fraction (Kanakia et al. 2014)