| Literature DB >> 27799056 |
Lingling Ou1, Bin Song2, Huimin Liang2, Jia Liu2, Xiaoli Feng2, Bin Deng3, Ting Sun1, Longquan Shao4.
Abstract
Due to their unique physicochemical properties, graphene-family nanomaterials (GFNs) are widely used in many fields, especially in biomedical applications. Currently, many studies have investigated the biocompatibility and toxicity of GFNs in vivo and in intro. Generally, GFNs may exert different degrees of toxicity in animals or cell models by following with different administration routes and penetrating through physiological barriers, subsequently being distributed in tissues or located in cells, eventually being excreted out of the bodies. This review collects studies on the toxic effects of GFNs in several organs and cell models. We also point out that various factors determine the toxicity of GFNs including the lateral size, surface structure, functionalization, charge, impurities, aggregations, and corona effect ect. In addition, several typical mechanisms underlying GFN toxicity have been revealed, for instance, physical destruction, oxidative stress, DNA damage, inflammatory response, apoptosis, autophagy, and necrosis. In these mechanisms, (toll-like receptors-) TLR-, transforming growth factor β- (TGF-β-) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) dependent-pathways are involved in the signalling pathway network, and oxidative stress plays a crucial role in these pathways. In this review, we summarize the available information on regulating factors and the mechanisms of GFNs toxicity, and propose some challenges and suggestions for further investigations of GFNs, with the aim of completing the toxicology mechanisms, and providing suggestions to improve the biological safety of GFNs and facilitate their wide application.Entities:
Keywords: Future prospects; Graphene-family nanomaterials; Mechanisms; Physicochemical properties; Toxicity; Toxicokinetics
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27799056 PMCID: PMC5088662 DOI: 10.1186/s12989-016-0168-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Part Fibre Toxicol ISSN: 1743-8977 Impact factor: 9.400
Fig. 1Graphene materials and their biological interactions. (A) A parameter space for the most widely used graphene materials can be described by the dimensions and surface functionalization of the material, the latter defined as the percentage of the carbon atoms in sp3 hybridization. Green squares represent epitaxially grown graphene; yellow, mechanically exfoliated graphene; red, chemically exfoliated graphene; blue, graphene oxide. Note that a number of other graphene-related materials (such as graphene quantum dots and graphene nanoribbons) are also being used in experiments. (B) Possible interactions between graphene-related materials with cells (the graphene flakes are not to scale). (a) Adhesion onto the outer surface of the cell membrane. (b) Incorporation in between the monolayers of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer. (c) Translocation of membrane. (d) Cytoplasmic internalization. (e) Clathrin-mediated endocytosis. (f) Endosomal or phagosomal internalization. (g) Lysosomal or other perinuclear compartment localization. (h) Exosomal localization. The biological outcomes from such interactions can be considered to be either adverse or beneficial, depending on the context of the particular biomedical application. Different graphene-related materials will have different preferential mechanisms of interaction with cells and tissues that largely await discovery. [90] Copyright (2014), with permission from American Association for Advancement of Science
Toxicity of GFNs in organs
| Graphene family nanomaterials | Physiochemial properties and functionalization | Animals | Dose and time incubation | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nanoscale graphene oxide (NGO) | No information | C57BL/6 mice | 0, 1, 5, 10 mg/kg, intratracheal instillation | Result in acute lung injury (ALI) and chronic pulmonary fibrosis | [ |
| Few layer graphene (FLG) | No information | ICR mice | 0.1, or 1 mg/mL, oral gavage or intratracheal instillation 3 or 28 days | Intratracheally instilled FLG resulted in acute lung injury and pulmonary edema, FLG didn’t show detectable absorption through the gastrointestinal tract by oral gavage. | [ |
| Graphene platelets (GPs) | No information | Mice | inhalation exposure, 1 day-6 weeks | GP caused acute inflammation in lung at 1 day, and alleviated inflammation in lung after 6 weeks | [ |
| Graphene nanoplatelets (GPs) | Thickness of 10 nm | Female C57BL/6 strain mice | 50 μg per mouse, pharyngeal aspiration or intrapleural installation, 24 h- 7 days | Large GP were inflammogenic in both the lung and the pleural space | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 0.93 nm | Sprague-Dawley rats | 0.5 or 4 mg/m3, inhalation exposure, single 6 h | The single inhalation exposure to GO induce minimal toxic responses in rat lungs | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 0.9 nm | Male ICR mice | 1.0 mg/kg, intravenous injected, 24 h | Accumulated mainly in the liver and lungs | [ |
| GO | Thickness of < 4 nm | Male and female ICR-strain mice | 24 mg/kg, tail vein injected, 5 days | Didn’t effect pup numbers, sex ratio, weights, pup survival rates or pup growth, low toxicity for male reproduction | [ |
| GO | Thickness of ~1.0 nm | Kun Ming mice | 1,10 mg/ kg, intravenous injection 14 days | Led to high accumulation, long-time retention, pulmonary edema and granuloma formation | [ |
| NGO-PEG | Thickness of 1 nm | Male Kunming mice | 5 mg/kg, tail intravenous injection | NGO-PEG alleviated acute tissue injuries, decreased the early weight loss | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 0.94,1.22, 4.43 and 5.66 nm, | Balb/c mice | 4 mg/kg, intraperitoneal injection | Accumulated in the reticuloendothelial (RES) system including liver and spleen over a long time | [ |
| GO | Thickness of GO, GQD: 0.5–1 nm | Balb/c mice | 20 mg/kg intravenous injection or intraperitoneal injection 14 days | GO appeared toxic and caused death | [ |
| Purified graphene oxide (pGO) | Thickness of 1–2 nm, | Female C57Bl/6 mice | 50 μg/animal, intraperitoneal injection | Induced moderate inflammation and granuloma formation following | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 3.9 and 4.05 nm, | C57BL/6 male mice | Series concentrations, subcutaneous injection21 days | The micro-size of GO induced much stronger inflammation responses than the nanosized GO | [ |
| GO | Size of 1110 to 16 200 nm | C57BL/6 J mice | 2 or 20 mg/kg, subcutaneous and intraperitoneal injection | Both GO and a reduction of GO result in immune cell infiltration, uptake, and clearance. | [ |
| RGO-iron oxide nanoparticles (rGO-IONP) | Thickness of ˂10 nm | Female Balb/c mice | 400 μg, subcutaneous injection, | RGO–IONP can effectively inactivate multiple-drug-resistant bacteria in subcutaneous abscesses | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 0.94, 1.22, 4.43 and 5.66 nm, | Female balb/c mice | 100 mg/kg, Oral administration; 50 mg/kg, intraperitoneal injection, 1, 7 and 30 days | No obvious tissue uptake via oral administration, indicating the rather limited intestinal adsorption of those nanomaterials | [ |
| RGO | sizes of small rGO: 87.97 ± 30.83, | Male C57black/6 mice | 60 mg/kg, oral gavage, 5 days | RGO affected general locomotor activity, balance, and neuromuscular coordination, but showed little change in exploratory, anxiety-like, or learning and memory behaviors. | [ |
Toxicity of GFNs in cell models
| Graphene family nanomaterias | Physiochemial properties and Functionalization | Cells | Dose and time incubation | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pristine graphene | Thickness of 2–3 nm, size of 500–1000 nm | Murine RAW 264.7 macrophages | 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 and 100 mg/mL, 48 h | Depleted of the mitochondrial membrane potential, increased ROS, triggered apoptosis | [ |
| Pristine graphene | Thickness of 3–5 nm, size of 100–110 nm | Rat pheochromocytoma cells PC12 cells | 10–100 μg/mL 1–48 h | Increased LDH release, ROS levels and caspase3 activation, induced apoptosis | [ |
| Graphene oxide(GO) | Four different diameters (342–765 nm) | Human Erythrocytes | 3.125-200 μg/mL 24 h | Hemolytic activity, ROS generation, LDH release, decreased cell viability | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 0.9 nm | Human lung epithelial A549 cells | 10, 25, 50, 100 and 200 μg/mL 24 h | Dose-dependent oxidative stress, cell viability decreased at high concentration | [ |
| GO | Thickness of 1 nm, lateral dimension of 200–500 nm | Human lung fibroblast cells HLF cells | 10–500 μg/mL 2–24 h | Oxidative stress induced, concentration-dependent cytotoxicity and genotoxicity | [ |
| GO | Size distribution: 592 ± 10.9 nm in PBS, 1272 ± 56.2 nm in FBS | HeLa cells | 0–80 μg/mL 24 h | Released LDH, increased MDA and ROS generation, decreased SOD, reduction of cell viability, | [ |
| GO | smaller-sized GO: 50–350 nm | Macrophage cell J774A.1 | 20 μg/mL 1-24 h | Size-dependent M1 induction of macrophages, | [ |
| GO | thickness: < 2 nm, | Mouse CT26 colon carcinoma cell | 50–100 μg/mL 18 h | Triggered autophagy, enhances cell death | [ |
| Reduced graphene oxide (rGO) | Thickness of 11 ± 4 nm | Human mesenchymal stem | 0.01–100 μg/mL 1–24 h | Induced DNA fragmentations and chromosomal aberrations | [ |
| RGO | Thickness of 7 nm | human liver carcinoma | 1–200 mg/L 4–72 h | Dose-dependent DNA damage, oxidative stress, cytotoxicity | [ |
| RGO | Lateral size of 100–1500 nm | U87 and U118 glioma | 0–100 μg/mL 24 h | Reduction of cell proliferation and cell viability, induced apoptosis | [ |
| Bacterially reduced graphene oxide (B-rGO) | Thickness of 4.23 nm | MCF-7 cells | 20–100 μg/mL 24–72 h | Increased ROS generation, released LDH, dose-dependent toxicity | [ |
| Reduced graphene oxide | Thickness of 1 nm, | hMSCs | 0.01, 0.1, 1.0, 10, 100 μg/mL 96 h | Caused DNA fragmentations and chromosomal aberrations | [ |
| Reduced graphene oxide sheets (rGOSs) | Thicknesses of ~1.2 nm, | hMSCs | 0.01, 0.1, 1.0, 10, 100 μg/mL 96 h | Caused slight cell membrane damage and cytotoxicity | [ |
| Graphene-dextran | Thickness of 2.8 nm | HeLa cells | 10, 50,200 mg/L 24, 48, 72 h | GO-DEX remarkably reduced cell toxicity | [ |
| GNP-COOH | Thickness of GNP-COOH: 735.9 nm | Human bronchial epithelial | 10, 50 mg/L 24 h | Caused single stranded DNA damage, genotoxicity and hypomethylation | [ |
| PEG-DSPE (O-GNR-PEG-DSPE) | Width of 125–220 nm, lengths between of 500–2500 nm | HeLa cells | 10–400 μg/mL 24–48 h | Dose-dependent and time-dependent decrease in cell viability | [ |
| PEI-GO, | Thickness of 1–2 nm lateral width of 100–500 nm | Human lung fibroblast cells | 1, 10, 50, 100 μg/ml 24 h | Caused concentration-dependent cytotoxicity and genotoxicity | [ |
| PEG-GQD | Sizes of 3–5 nm | HeLa cells and A549 cells | 10–160 μg/mL 24 h | No noticeable cytotoxicity | [ |
| FBS-GO | Thickness of 4.0–18.0 nm | A549 cells | 0–200 μg/mL 24 h | Cytotoxicity of GO was greatly mitigated at 10 % FBS | [ |
Fig. 2A representative trajectory of HP35 adsorbing onto the graphene. (a) Representative snapshots at various time points. The proteins are shown in cartoons with red helix and green loop, and the graphene is shown in wheat. The aromatic residues that form the π-π stacking interactions are shown in blue, others are shown in green. (b) The contacting surface area of HP35 with the graphene. (c) The RMSD of HP35 from its native structure and the number of residues in the α-helix structure. Here, the secondary structures are determined by the DSSP program. (d) The distance between the graphene and the aromatic residues, including F35, W23, F10, F17, and F06. To show the adsorbing process clearer, the χ-axis had been truncated and rescaled. [41] Copyright (2011), with permission from Journal of Physical of Chemistry
Fig. 3Schematic diagram showed the possible mechanisms of GFNs cytotoxicity. GFNs get into cells through different ways, which induce in ROS generation, LDH and MDA increase, and Ca2+ release. Subsequently, GFNs cause kinds of cell injury, for instance, cell membrane damage, inflammation, DNA damage, mitochondrial disorders, apoptosis or necrosis
Fig. 4Schematic diagram of MAPKs, TGF-beta and TNF-α dependent pathways involved in GFNs toxicity. ROS was the main factors activating the MAPKs and TGF-beta signaling pathways to lead to the activation of Bim and Bax, triggering the cascade of caspases and JNK pathway. The activation of caspase 3 and RIP1 resulted in apoptosis and necrosis finally
Fig. 5A schematic diagram elucidating signalling pathway of TLR4 and TLR9 responsible for GFNs-induced cytotoxicity. GFNs can be recognized by TLRs, thus activate IKK and IκB by a MyD88-dependent mechanism, resulting in the release of NF-κB subunits and initiating the translocation into the nucleus. Thus, pro-inflammatory factors were transcribed and secreted out of nucleus, modulating the immune responses initiating programmed autophagy, apoptosis and necrosis