| Literature DB >> 32872646 |
Horrick Sharma1, Somrita Mondal1.
Abstract
The usage of nanomaterials for cancer treatment has been a popular research focus over the past decade. Nanomaterials, including polymeric nanomaterials, metal nanoparticles, semiconductor quantum dots, and carbon-based nanomaterials such as graphene oxide (GO), have been used for cancer cell imaging, chemotherapeutic drug targeting, chemotherapy, photothermal therapy, and photodynamic therapy. In this review, we discuss the concept of targeted nanoparticles in cancer therapy and summarize the in vivo biocompatibility of graphene-based nanomaterials. Specifically, we discuss in detail the chemistry and properties of GO and provide a comprehensive review of functionalized GO and GO-metal nanoparticle composites in nanomedicine involving anticancer drug delivery and cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: GO–metal nanoparticles; cancer therapy; graphene oxide; nanomedicine; nanoparticles; targeted drug delivery system
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32872646 PMCID: PMC7504176 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21176280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Nanomaterials of different shapes and sizes.
Figure 2Surface functionalization of graphene oxide (GO) nanoparticles (NPs) and loading of drug and photosensitizer on the surface-modified GO–metal NPs. Finally, the application of GO nanocomposites for targeted drug delivery and in vivo photodynamic therapy using the near-infrared (NIR) laser irradiation is shown.
Figure 3Physicochemical and surface properties of nanoparticles (NPs) that affect protein formation and reticuloendothelial system (RES) uptake. Particle size, shape, surface charge, lipophilicity, functional groups and polyethylene glycol (PEG)ylation influence the opsonization and RES uptake of NPs. Non-spherical shaped NPs of ≈100 nm undergo less RES uptake than spherical and larger-sized NPs. PEGylation, hydrophobicity, and slightly anionic or neutral zwitter ionic particles hinder protein corona formation and undergo less RES accumulation.
Figure 4The figure shows passive (enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect) (a) and active tumor targeting (b) of nanoparticles (NPs) for targeted drug delivery. Tumors have disorganized and leaky vasculature with a higher number of pores facilitating the movement of NPs from the vasculature and their accumulation in the tumor environment. Moreover, active targeting makes use of targeting ligands that are attached to NPs and bind specifically to cell surface receptors of tumor cells.
Figure 5The figure illustrates important properties of graphene oxide (GO) and biomedical applications of GO-based nanomaterials and nanocomposites.
Figure 6Chemical structure of graphene oxide (GO) (a) and multilayered planar structural arrangement of GO (b).
The graphene oxide (GO)–chitosan (CS) composites developed, the drug used, the type of cancer and cell treated, and the drug loading and release efficiency.
| GO–CS Nanocomposites | Size | Drug Used | Cancer Cell Line | Drug Loading Efficiency | Drug Release Efficiency | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rGO–CS–TPP | 340.55 ± 21.78 nm | DOX | Prostate cancer cells (PC-3) | 65% | 50% in 48 h | [ |
| GO–CS–Dex | 263.86 ± 5.9 nm | DOX | Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | 63.7% | 28.9% at pH 7.4, 49.1% at pH 5.0 | [ |
| GO–CS-γ–PGA | 200–300 nm | DOX | Human cervical cancer cells (HeLa) | 118.83% | 5.37% at pH 7.4, 52.58% at pH 5 | [ |
| GO–CS–CS/DMMA | 114 nm | DOX | Human liver cancer cells (HepG2) | 89.35% ± 4.32% | 5.1% at pH 7.4, 56.4% at pH 5 in 6 h, 84.75% in 18 h | [ |
| GO–CS | several hundred nanometers to several micrometers | IBU | Human lymphoblastic leukemia cells (CEM) and human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | 9.7% | 10% at pH 1.4, 19% at pH 7.4 | [ |
| 5-FU | 5.3% | 70% at pH 1.4, 50% at pH 7.4 |
Figure 7Preparation of graphene oxide (GO)–polyethylene glycol (PEG)/paclitaxel (PTX) nanoscale drug delivery system [140]. (Reprinted with permission from Zhiyuan Xu et al. ‘Covalent Functionalization of Graphene Oxide with Biocompatible Poly(ethylene glycol) for Delivery of Paclitaxel’. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2014, 6, 17268−17276. Copyright (2020) American Chemical Society).
Graphene oxide (GO)–polyethylene glycol (PEG) composites, the drug used, type of cancer cell treated, drug loading, and release efficiency.
| GO–PEG Nanocomposites | Size | Drug Used | Cancer Cell Line | Drug Loading Efficiency | Drug Release Efficiency | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GO–IONP–PEG | 50–300 nm | DOX | Murine breast cancer cells (4T1) | 100% | 20% at pH 7.4, 50% at pH 5 | [ |
| NGO–PEG NH2, later conjugated with antibody Rituxan for better targeting | ≤20 nm | DOX | Hematopoietic human cancer Raji cells | not defined | 15% at pH 7.4, 40% at pH 5.5 | [ |
| GO–PEG 4000 | not defined | DOX | Adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelial cells (A549) | 87% | 2.5% at pH 7.4 in 1 h, 3.5% at pH 5.8 in 1 h | [ |
| NGO–PEG NH2 | 146.10 nm | Pt and DOX | Human tongue squamous carcinoma cells (CAL-27) and human breast cancer | DOX: Pt: NGO–PEG = 0.376:0.376:1 | 30.0% (Pt) and 41.0% (DOX) in more than 72 h at pH 7.4, | [ |
| FA–PEG–GO, later conjugated with peptide for targeted delivery | GO size 100 nm, size of FA–PEG–GO not defined | CPT | Human cervical carcinoma cells (HeLa) | 90% | 21.5% at pH 7.4, 71% at pH 5 | [ |
| GO–PEG NH2, later conjugated with photosensitizer Ce6 for synergistic cancer photodynamic therapy | ≈170 nm | DOX | Mouse squamous carcinoma cells (SCC7) | 51.9 ± 5.1% for Ce6 and 61.7 ± 4.4% for DOX | Not defined | [ |
| GO–PEG NH2 | 50–200 nm | PTX | Adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelial cells (A549) and human breast cancer | 11.2% | Not defined | [ |
Figure 8Schematic illustration of the preparation of a hyaluronic acid (HA)−graphene oxide (GO)−doxorubicin (DOX) nanohybrid [151]. (Reprinted with permission from Song et al. ‘Hyaluronic Acid-Decorated Graphene Oxide Nanohybrids as Nanocarriers for Targeted and pH-Responsive Anticancer Drug Delivery’. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2014, 6, 11882–11890. Copyright (2020) American Chemical Society).
Graphene oxide (GO)– hyaluronic acid (HA) composites, their size, the drug used, type of cancer cell treated, drug loading, and release efficiency.
| GO–HA Nanocomposites | Size | Drug Used | Cancer Cell Line | Drug Loading Efficiency | Drug Release Efficiency | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GO–HA | 40–350 nm | DOX | HeLa human cervical cancer cells (L-929) | 81.5% | 6.8% for pH 7.4, 10.9% for pH 6.3, 26% at pH 5.2 | [ |
| GO–HA | 78.1 nm | Photosensitizer Ce6 | Human cervical cancer cells (HeLa) cells and mouse embryonic fibroblast cells (NIH3T3) | 115% | 7% at pH 5, 22% at pH 7, and 30% at pH 9 | [ |
| GO–HA–RGD peptide | 70–490 nm | DOX | Human ovarian cancer cells (SKOV-3) | 72.9% | 30.2% at pH 5.5, 7.6% at pH 7.4 | [ |
| NGO–SS–HA | 125 nm | Gef | Adenocarcinomic human alveolar basal epithelial cells (A549) | 13.8% | 30.8% in absence of GSH, 60.1% in presence of GSH | [ |
| NGO–HA | 250 nm | Epirubicin | Murine melanoma cells (B16F1) | 2% at pH 4, 9% at pH 7, 25% at pH 9 | 70% at pH 5, 18% at pH 7 | [ |
| GO–HA, later combined with iron oxide NPs for magnetic field-enabled chemotherapy for better cancer cell inhibition | 166.8 ± 16.2 nm | DOX, PTX | Human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) | 33.5 ± 1.4% | 53% at pH 7.4, 61% at pH 5.5 | [ |
| GO–HA | 10−200 nm | DOX | Human liver cancer cells (HepG2) | 42.9% | 20% at pH 7.4, 40% at pH 5.3 | [ |
| rGO–HA-g-PMAO | 108 nm | Used for PTT | MCF-7 human breast cancer cells | - | - | [ |
Figure 9Schematic representation of the synthesis of cyclic aminopeptidase N (APN)-targeting peptide (cNGR)-modified functionalized graphene oxide (GO) nanosheets and preparation of drug delivery system GP–cNGR/polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP)/Combretastatin A4 (CA4) [165]. Top: scheme (a); bottom: scheme (b). (Reprinted with permission from Ding et al. ‘A tumor-targeting drug delivery system based on cyclic NGR-modified, combretastatin A4-loaded, functionalized graphene oxide nanosheets’. RSC Adv. 2016, 6, 68134–68140. Copyright (2020) Royal Society of Chemistry).
The graphene oxide (GO)–Polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) composites developed, their size, the drug used, the type of cancer cell treated, drug loading, and release efficiency.
| GO–PVP Nanocomposites | Size | Drug Used | Cancer Cell Line | Drug Loading Efficiency | Drug Release Efficiency | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rGO–PVP–RGD | Photosensitizer Chlorin e6 | Human gastric cancer cells (MGC 803) | 7.41% | [ | ||
| GO–cNGR/PVP | 204.6 nm | CA4 | Human fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080) and human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | 56.3% | 53.7% at pH 7.4 | [ |
| FA–NGO–PVP | <100 nm | DOX | Human cervical cancer cells (HeLa) | 107.5% | 60% at pH 5.5, | [ |
| GO–PVP | Few hundred nm | SN-38 | Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) | 17% | 11–13% at pH 7, 26–30% at pH 5 | [ |
| GO–PVP | 300–400 nm | QSR and Gef | Human ovarian teratocarcinoma cells (PA-1) | 20% of QSR and 46% of GEF | 34–37% at pH 5, | [ |
Figure 10Synthesis of nanographene oxide (NGO)−dextran–hematin (HDex) hybrids [169]. (Reprinted with permission from Jin et al. ‘Self-assembled graphene-dextran nanohybrid for killing drug-resistant cancer cells’. ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2013, 5, 7181–7189. Copyright (2020) American Chemical Society).
The graphene oxide (GO)–dextran (Dex) composites, their size, the drug used, the type of cancer cell treated, drug loading, and release efficiency.
| GO–Dextran Nanocomposites | Size | Drug Used | Cancer Cell Line | Drug Loading Efficiency | Drug Release Efficiency | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GO–IONP–CS–Dex | 425.33 ± 3.91 nm | DOX | Human lung cancer cells (A549) | 140.4% | 36.5% at pH 7.4, 59.2% at pH 5.0 | [ |
| NGO–HDex | 223–239 nm | DOX | Multidrug-resistant breast cancer cells (MCF-7/ADR) | Above 90% | 11% at pH 7.4, 28% at pH 5.5 | [ |
| rGO/DOX/RGD–Dex | 60 nm | DOX | Murine melanoma cells (B16F10) | 19.75% | 7.4% at pH 7.4, 12.7% at pH 6.8, 38.4% at pH 5.3 | [ |
| GO–CS/Dex | 373.15 ± 0.67 nm | DOX | Human breast cancer cells (MCF-7) and human liver cancer cells (HepG2) | 63.7% | 28.9% at pH 7, | [ |
| GO100–Dex | 133 ± 7.18 nm | DOX | human umbilical vein endothelial | 64% | 48% at pH 5.8, | [ |
In vivo studies on graphene-based nanomaterials (GBNs).
| GBNs | Size | In Vivo Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| PEGylated GO–IONP | 10 nm | Drug delivery/DOX for breast cancer | [ |
| NGO–SS–HA composite | 125 nm | Drug delivery/gefitinib for lung cancer | [ |
| GO–adipic acid–HA conjugate | 40–350 nm | Drug delivery/DOX for cervical cancer | [ |
| AgInZnS–graphene oxide | 100 nm | In vivo imaging in SK-BR-3 breast cancer cells of tumor-bearing mice | [ |
| UFH–rGO | <100 nm | Biocompatibility study/good biocompatibility and negligible cytotoxicity to mice heart, liver, spleen, lungs, and kidney | [ |
| Silanized GO | micrometer range | Biocompatibility study/no reduction in body weight or decrease in the relative weight of organs | [ |
| Albumin-functionalized PEG-coated GO | 191 nm | Biocompatibility study/no cytotoxicity to major organs such as heart, liver, spleen, lungs, and kidneys of mice after 1 month of treatment | [ |
| PEGylated NGO | 10–30 nm | Biocompatibility study/did not cause appreciable toxicity in mice over 3 months | [ |
| Few-layer pristine graphene | 100–200 nm | Biocompatibility study/PEGylated derivative despite accumulation did not induce any noticeable toxicity | [ |
| GO–DEX | 50–100 nm | Biocompatibility study/accumulated in the RES and got cleared within 1 week without causing noticeable short-term toxicity | [ |
| Manganese and Dex-functionalized graphene nanoparticles | 100 nm | Biocompatibility study/did not induce an inflammatory response in major organs | [ |
| GO | 10–800 nm | Biocompatibility study/did not change the pathophysiology of all organs except lungs | [ |
| GO nanosheets | 1 nm | Biocompatibility study/no significant changes in the eyeball appearance, intraocular pressure, electroretinogram, and histological examination was observed | [ |
| GO | <500 nm | Biocompatibility study/purified GO did not induce inflammation or granuloma upon intraperitoneal injection | [ |
| Large GO | Large GO: 1–5 µm, | Biocompatibility study/increasing injecting dose and GO particle size caused higher accumulation in the lungs; on the other hand, small size GO was mainly accumulated in the liver | [ |
| GO | 0.5–2.0 nm | Biocompatibility study/GO (of size 0.5 to 2.0 nm) was a significant contributor to pulmonary toxicity when injected directly to the lungs of mice; the toxicity was significantly reduced with pristine graphene through liquid-phase exfoliation or dispersion of graphene | [ |
| GO | 0.2–5 μm | Biocompatibility study/i.v. administration of GO-induced pulmonary thromboembolism in mice, while rGO was significantly less effective in aggregating platelets | [ |
| Graphene nanosheets or multiwalled carbon nanotubes | 2–25 nm | Biocompatibility study/induced site-specific Th2 inflammatory responses via the IL-33/ST2 axis | [ |
| NGO–PSS | 500 nm | Biocompatibility study/accumulation in the liver, lung, and spleen, causing acute liver injury and chronic inflammation | [ |
| reduced graphene oxide nanosheets | 87–472 nm | Biocompatibility study/mice showed little change in anxiety-like or learning and memory behaviors | [ |
| GO | 1 nm | Biocompatibility study/high dose (0.4 mg) exhibited chronic toxicity resulting in the death of four out of nine mice | [ |