| Literature DB >> 31921797 |
Melis Emanet1, Özlem Sen1, Irem Çulha Taşkin1, Mustafa Çulha1.
Abstract
Two-dimensional boron nitride nanostructures (2D-BNNs) have been increasingly investigated for their applications in several scientific and technological areas. This considerable interest is due to their unique physicochemical properties, which include high hydrophobicity, heat and electrical insulation, resistance to oxidation, antioxidation capacity, thermal conductivity, high chemical stability, mechanical strength, and hydrogen storage capacity. They are also used as fillers, antibacterial agents, protective coating agents, lubricants, boron neutron capture therapy agents, nanocarriers for drug delivery, and for the receptor phase in chemosensors. The investigations for their use in medicine and biomedicine are very promising, including cancer therapy and wound healing. In this review, 2D-BNNs synthesis and their surface modification strategies, biocompatibility, and bioapplication studies are discussed. Finally, a perspective for the future use of these novel nanomaterials in the biomedical field is provided.Entities:
Keywords: bioapplication; biocompatibility; functionalization; synthesis; two-dimensional boron nitride nanoparticles
Year: 2019 PMID: 31921797 PMCID: PMC6915082 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Schematical representation of several physical forms of BN nanospheres. Reproduced with Permission from Tian et al. (2013) and Zhang et al. (2012).
Reaction conditions and methods to produce 2D-BNNs.
| Boron-rich conducting electrodes | N2 gas | Nickel, cobalt | Plasma-arc discharge | None | hBN Nanococoons | Cuming and Zettl, |
| (B(OMe)3) | NH3 gas, 800–1,500°C | None | CVD | None | BN spheres | Wood et al., |
| (B(OMe)3) | NH3 and Ar gas, 800–1,500°C | None | CVD | None | Hollow BNs | Li et al., |
| NH4BF4 and NaN3 | N2 gas, 250°C, 450 MPa | S | Ball milling | (HCl), C6H6, ddH2O | hBN | Lian et al., |
| H3BO3, C3H6N6 | NH3 gas, 1600°C | None | CVD | None | BN | Ansaloni and Sousa, |
| Carbon nanocages, B2O3 | NH3 gas, 1350-1450°C | None | Elemental substitution reaction | None | BN and BCN nanocages | Suryavanshi et al., |
| Boron powder | NH3 gas | Fes/Fe2O3 | TCVD | None | BN nanosheets | Ansaloni and Sousa, |
| H3BO3, Colemanite, B2O3 | NH3 gas, 1300°C | None | CVD | None | hBN | Sen et al., |
Figure 2HRSEM and HRTEM images of 2D-BNN and 2D-BCNN nanocages (A,C: 2D-BNN; B,D: 2D-BCNN). Reproduced with Permission from Suryavanshi et al. (2014).
Several functionalization approaches of 2D-BNNs.
| BN | ddH2O | Sonication | None | BN-OH | Lin et al., |
| BN | Alkoxyl groups | Solution phase oxygen radical functionalization | Hydrolytic defunctionalization | BN-OH | Sainsbury et al., |
| BN | Sodium hydroxide | Ball milling method | None | BN-OH | Lee et al., |
| BN | N3C4 | Reverse reaction | None | BN-OH | Weng et al., |
| BN | PEG | Exfoliation | None | BN-NH2 | Lin et al., |
| BN | Urea | Ball milling method | None | BN-NH2 | Lei et al., |
Figure 3MTT assays on (A) HEK-293T and (B) CHO cell cultures incubated for 48 h with different concentrations of h-BN nanoplates. Results are presented as mean value ± standard error; n = 3 for the MTT assays. Republished with the permission of [Royal Society of Chemistry], from Lu et al. (2016); permission conveyed through Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.
Figure 4Bright-field microscopy images of SaOS2 cells cultured in the presence of (A) standard culture medium (control), (B) bulk BN, (C) nanosheet NS1, (D) nanosheet NS2, (E) nanoparticle NP1, and (F) nanoparticle NP2. Reproduced with Permission from Mateti et al. (2018).
Cytocompatibility of 2D-BNNs on culture cell lines.
| None | HEK-293T and CHO | MTT and annexin V-FITC/PI | 2 days | Nontoxic ≤ 100 μg/mL, no apoptosis | Lu et al., |
| None | CRL 2120 and MDCK | MTT, SRB colorimetric, PicoGreen | 1 or 2 days | Nontoxic ≤ 100 μg/mL for both cell lines | Kivanç et al., |
| None | LNCaP and DU145 | WST-8, annexin | 3 or 6 days | Time-dependent toxicity, induce apoptosis | Li et al., |
| None | SaOS2 | MTS, DPPH assay | 7 days | Size-dependent toxicity and ROS production | Mateti et al., |
| None and hBN-OH | KB | MTT | 1 days | Nontoxic ≤ 500 μg/mL | Nurunnabi et al., |
Bioapplications of 2D-BNNs.
| BNNS/CpG oligonucleotides | Drug delivery, immunotherapy | Show great capacity to stimulate IL6 and TNF-α production, increased cytokine production | Zhang et al., |
| Chitosan coated BNNS/CpG oligonucleotides | Drug delivery, immunostimulatory | Higher immunostimulatory effects increasing cytokines (IL-6 and TNF-α) in TLR9 cells even more than positive control (lipofectamine-CpGs) | Zhang et al., |
| BNNPs-Dox | Drug delivery | Efficient cellular internalization of BNNP-Dox and serious Dox release | Sukhorukova et al., |
| BNNS-FA/Dox | Drug delivery | pH dependent Dox release, greater cytotoxic effect on HeLa cells | Feng et al., |
| FA-Cyst-Ag/BNNPs | Drug delivery | Positive effects on cancer cell targeting | Permyakova et al., |
| Dox-hBN | Drug delivery | pH dependent Dox release | Emanet et al., |
| AuNPs-BNNs | Drug delivery | Attractive materials for cancer drug delivery and photodynamic therapy | Jedrzejczak-Silicka et al., |
| 2D-BN nanoparticles | Drug delivery, spectroscopic marker | Tumor cell perturbation | Gnatyuk et al., |
| DOX@PAH-cit–BNNS | Drug delivery | Decreased cell viability in both MCF-7 and HeLa cells more than free DOX | Feng et al., |
| BNNP/PPF | Bone tissue engineering | Enhanced mechanical strength and adsorption of collagen I protein, improved ECM deposition, cell attachment and spreading for bone grafts | Farshid et al., |
| BNNSs/AKM scaffolds | Bone tissue engineering | Increase compressive strength and fracture toughness | Shuai et al., |
| hBNs/gelatin ESM | Orthopedic applications, tissue engineering, | Biocompatible and biodegradable scaffolds for orthopedic applications | Nagarajan et al., |
| OH-BNNS/PVA | Drug delivery, artificial cartilages | Controllable reinforcements in both mechanical and thermal responses | Jing et al., |
| PEEK/hBN | Nanocomposite | Improved mechanical and thermo mechanical properties | Liu et al., |
| hBNs-impregnated silane | Bioimplant | 5-fold improvement in the corrosion resistance in simulated human body fluid even after 96 h | Al-Saadi et al., |
| Hollow BNs | Prostate cancer treatment | More suppressive effects on tumors as compared to the PTX drugs | Li et al., |
| hBNs | Lubricant | Better lubrication and maximum performance in LPEF | Turkoglu et al., |
| hBNs | Lubricant | Most effective lubricant based on LFEP-lubricant concentration profile, higher concentration of hBN caused lower mechanical properties | Ugurlu and Turkoglu, |
| BN nanoparticles | Cosmetic | Improved skin appearance by not only blurring lines and wrinkles but also providing coverage of age spots, blemishes and discolorations | Butts et al., |
| BN fillers | Cosmetic | Enhanced filling properties and illusion about smoothness of skin by hiding the wrinkles | Newman et al., |
| BN nanoparticles/coated with amino acids and mineral oils | Cosmetic | Improved ingredients of cosmetic product | Koshida et al., |
Figure 5Using a boron nitride nanosphere (BNNS)-binding peptide as a linker molecule, BNNS are able to efficiently deliver immunostimulatory CpG ODNs into cells and significantly enhance the immune response. Reproduced with Permission from Zhang et al. (2012).
Figure 6Visualization of LNCaP cells by confocal microscopy: (A) cells treated with modified 2D-BN nanoparticles and (B) reference cells (green fluorescence: FITC, blue fluorescence: Hoechst 33258). (Gnatyuk et al., 2018): Published by The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 7SEM images of BMSCs seeded scaffolds for (a) 1, (b) 3, (c) 5, and (d) 7 days. Reproduced with Permission from Shuai et al. (2015).
Figure 8Effects of hollow 2D-BNNs on cellular and in vivo subcutaneously injected prostate cancer models. (A) BA or hollow 2D-BNNs with controlled B release resulting into different LDH release and caspase-3/7 activity in LNCaP prostate cancer, which is responsible for necrosis and apoptosis, respectively; (B) effects of saline, BA, and hollow BNNs-b spheres on mice pre-injected with LNCaP prostate cancer cells (Li et al., 2017).