| Literature DB >> 26649139 |
Anna Jarosz1, Marta Skoda1, Ilona Dudek1, Dariusz Szukiewicz1.
Abstract
Due to the development of nanotechnology graphene and graphene-based nanomaterials have attracted the most attention owing to their unique physical, chemical, and mechanical properties. Graphene can be applied in many fields among which biomedical applications especially diagnostics, cancer therapy, and drug delivery have been arousing a lot of interest. Therefore it is essential to understand better the graphene-cell interactions, especially toxicity and underlying mechanisms for proper use and development. This review presents the recent knowledge concerning graphene cytotoxicity and influence on different cancer cell lines.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26649139 PMCID: PMC4662972 DOI: 10.1155/2016/5851035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1The graphene structure: single layer of sp2-hybridized carbon atoms arranged in 2D crystal honeycomb lattice (adapted from [9]).
Figure 2Schematic toxicity mechanisms of graphene on human cancer cells. Graphene provides the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) which are the cause of DNA (fragmentation and condensation) and cell membrane damage (release of LDH, lipid peroxidation, and increase in MDA-malondialdehyde), mitochondrial disorders (reduction of mitochondrial membrane potential ΔΨ, increase in Ca2+), and cell death.
Influence of graphene-based nanomaterials on cancer cells.
| Cell/tissue | Graphene-based nanomaterials | Dose and time incubation | Percentage of inhibition | Effects | Reference |
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| 10–400 | 24 h: | Slight reduction of cell viability |
Mullick Chowdhury et al. [ |
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| 0–100 | 100 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Gurunathan et al. [ | |
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| 10–80 | 80 | Reduction of cell viability | Chaudhari et al. [ | |
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| 0–150 | 24 h: | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Gurunathan et al. [ |
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| 100–500 | 500 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Liu et al. [ | |
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| 10–400 | 24 h: | (i) Slight reduction of cell viability | Shim et al. [ |
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| 0–160 | 160 | Slight reduction of cell viability | Chong et al. [ |
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| 10–400 | 24 h: | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Mullick Chowdhury et al. [ | |
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| 0–80 | 80 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Zhang et al. [ | |
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| 400 | 80 nm: | Reduction of cell viability | Yoon et al. [ | |
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| 0–200 | 200 | Slight reduction of cell viability | Yuan et al. [ |
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| 10; 50; 100 | 100 | (i) Slight reduction of cell viability | de Marzi et al. [ | |
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| 0–400 | 400 | Reduction of cell viability | Chng et al. [ | |
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| 0–200 | s-GO: | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Chang et al. [ | |
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| 0–100 | 100 | Reduction of cell viability | Hu et al. [ | |
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| 20 | 85 | Reduction of cell viability | Hu et al. [ | |
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| 0-200 | EC20 = 10 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Chatterjee et al. [ |
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| 0–100 | 100 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Jaworski et al. [ |
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| 0–100 | 100 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Jaworski et al. [ | |
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| 0–100 | 100 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Jaworski et al. [ |
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| 0–100 | 100 | (i) Reduction of cell viability | Jaworski et al. [ | |
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| 50; 100; 250 | 250 | Reduction of cell viability | Moore et al. [ |
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| 0–100 | 100 | Slight reduction of cell viability | Wu et al. [ |
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| 0–180 | 160 | Reduction of cell viability | Wang et al. [ |