| Literature DB >> 32196921 |
Dimitrios Bitounis1, Dorsa Parviz2, Xiaoqiong Cao1, Carlo A Amadei3, Chad D Vecitis3, Elsie M Sunderland3, Brian D Thrall4, Mingliang Fang5, Michael S Strano2, Philip Demokritou1.
Abstract
In the last decade, along with the increasing use of graphene oxide (GO) in various applications, there is also considerable interest in understanding its effects on human health. Only a few experimental approaches can simulate common routes of exposure, such as ingestion, due to the inherent complexity of the digestive tract. This study presents the synthesis of size-sorted GO of sub-micrometer- or micrometer-sized lateral dimensions, its physicochemical transformations across mouth, gastric, and small intestinal simulated digestions, and its toxicological assessment against a physiologically relevant, in vitro cellular model of the human intestinal epithelium. Results from real-time characterization of the simulated digestas of the gastrointestinal tract using multi-angle laser diffraction and field-emission scanning electron microscopy show that GO agglomerates in the gastric and small intestinal phase. Extensive morphological changes, such as folding, are also observed on GO following simulated digestion. Furthermore, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy reveals that GO presents covalently bound N-containing groups on its surface. It is shown that the GO employed in this study undergoes reduction. Toxicological assessment of the GO small intestinal digesta over 24 h does not point to acute cytotoxicity, and examination of the intestinal epithelium under electron microscopy does not reveal histological alterations. Both sub-micrometer- and micrometer-sized GO variants elicit a 20% statistically significant increase in reactive oxygen species generation compared to the untreated control after a 6 h exposure.Entities:
Keywords: agglomeration; graphene oxide; human intestinal epithelium; ingestion; toxicity
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32196921 PMCID: PMC7260083 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201907640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281