| Literature DB >> 28260887 |
Fahimeh Charbgoo1, Mansor Bin Ahmad2, Majid Darroudi3.
Abstract
CeO2 nanoparticles (NPs) have shown promising approaches as therapeutic agents in biology and medical sciences. The physicochemical properties of CeO2-NPs, such as size, agglomeration status in liquid, and surface charge, play important roles in the ultimate interactions of the NP with target cells. Recently, CeO2-NPs have been synthesized through several bio-directed methods applying natural and organic matrices as stabilizing agents in order to prepare biocompatible CeO2-NPs, thereby solving the challenges regarding safety, and providing the appropriate situation for their effective use in biomedicine. This review discusses the different green strategies for CeO2-NPs synthesis, their advantages and challenges that are to be overcome. In addition, this review focuses on recent progress in the potential application of CeO2-NPs in biological and medical fields. Exploiting biocompatible CeO2-NPs may improve outcomes profoundly with the promise of effective neurodegenerative therapy and multiple applications in nanobiotechnology.Entities:
Keywords: biocompatibility; cerium oxide nanoparticles; green synthesis; morphology; size; surface Ce3+
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28260887 PMCID: PMC5325136 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S124855
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Green synthesis methods of CeO2-NPs
| Method of green synthesis | Applied material/organism | Particle size (nm) | Morphology of NPs | Critical point of view | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plant-mediated synthesis | 5 | Spherical | Different kinds of alkaloids acted as stabilizing agents | ||
| Plant-mediated synthesis | 36 | Spherical | Agglomeration of particles were observed due to covalent bonding of the individual particles | ||
| Plant-mediated synthesis | 63.6 | Spherical | |||
| Fungus-mediated synthesis | 5–20 | Spherical | Enzymes, proteins and heterocyclic derivatives could act as reducing and capping agent | ||
| Nutrient-mediated synthesis | EW protein | 8.2, 11.7 and 17.3 | Spherical | Being soluble and foam-like in water, EW has several proteins acting as stabilizing agents | |
| Nutrient-mediated synthesis | Honey | 23 | Spherical | Follow-up the sol–gel method | |
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Agarose | 10.5 | Spherical | Follow-up the sol–gel method | |
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Starch | 6 | Spherical | Providing ultrafine product | |
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Gum | 10 | Spherical | ||
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Dextran | 5 | Spherical | pH-dependent response | |
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Polyethylene glycol | ~2 | Spherical | Providing a framework for designing a hybrid metal oxide sol | |
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis | Chitosan | ~10 | Spherical | Applicable in food borne mycoplasma detection |
Abbreviations: EW, egg white; NPs, nanoparticles.
Figure 1Schematic representation of Gloriosa superba-based method of cerium oxide nanoparticle synthesis.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the Gum base method of CeO2-NP synthesis.
Abbreviation: CeO2-NPs, cerium oxide nanoparticles.
Advantages and challenges of different methods of CeO2-NPs green synthesis
| Type of green method | Advantages | Disadvantages/challenges |
|---|---|---|
| Plant-mediated synthesis of CeO2-NPs | Capable of generating spherical shaped NPs that possessed reduced cytotoxicity | Possibility of providing nonuniform morphology in some case which could be attributed to agglomeration of the individual NPs |
| Easy process, cost-effectiveness, energy and time-consuming technique | ||
| Size of obtained NPs exhibited wide distribution range from 5 to 63.6 nm using different bio-organisms for synthesis | ||
| Capable of producing stable, water dispersible and highly fluorescent NPs | ||
| Nutrient-mediated synthesis of CeO2-NPs | Controllable growth and subsequent isotropic formation of small and stable CeO2-NPs | Significant difference at the maximum concentration, which was safe for the cells using EW (800 μg/mL) or honey (100 μg/mL) as a stabilizing agents |
| Capable of providing spherical shaped CeO2-NPs | ||
| Biopolymer-mediated synthesis of CeO2-NPs | Generating NP with spherical morphology |
Abbreviations: CeO2-NPs, cerium oxide nanoparticles; EW, egg white.
Figure 3Major parameters affect the cytotoxicity of CeO2-NPs.
Abbreviation: CeO2-NPs, cerium oxide nanoparticles.
Different types of enzyme mimicking activities of cerium oxide nanoparticles
| Enzyme mimicking activities | Mechanism | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SOD | M(n+1)+-SOD + O2− → Mn+-SOD + O2 | ||
| Catalase | H2O2 + H2R → 2H2O + R | ||
| Peroxidase | ROOR’ + 2e− + 2H+ → ROH + R’OH | ||
Abbreviation: SOD, superoxide dismutase.
Figure 4Superoxide dismutase mimetic activity of CeO2-nanoparticles.
Figure 5H2O2 could make displacement of adsorbed DNA from CeO2-NPs, resulting in fluorescence signal enhancement.
Abbreviation: CeO2-NPs, cerium oxide nanoparticles.