| Literature DB >> 34770796 |
Kaushik Kumar Bharadwaj1, Bijuli Rabha1, Siddhartha Pati2,3, Tanmay Sarkar4,5, Bhabesh Kumar Choudhury6, Arpita Barman1, Dorothy Bhattacharjya1, Ankit Srivastava7, Debabrat Baishya1, Hisham Atan Edinur8, Zulhisyam Abdul Kari9, Noor Haslina Mohd Noor10.
Abstract
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have been widely explored and are well-known for their medical applications. Chemical and physical synthesis methods are a way to make AuNPs. In any case, the hunt for other more ecologically friendly and cost-effective large-scale technologies, such as environmentally friendly biological processes known as green synthesis, has been gaining interest by worldwide researchers. The international focus on green nanotechnology research has resulted in various nanomaterials being used in environmentally and physiologically acceptable applications. Several advantages over conventional physical and chemical synthesis (simple, one-step approach to synthesize, cost-effectiveness, energy efficiency, and biocompatibility) have drawn scientists' attention to exploring the green synthesis of AuNPs by exploiting plants' secondary metabolites. Biogenic approaches, mainly the plant-based synthesis of metal nanoparticles, have been chosen as the ideal strategy due to their environmental and in vivo safety, as well as their ease of synthesis. In this review, we reviewed the use of green synthesized AuNPs in the treatment of cancer by utilizing phytochemicals found in plant extracts. This article reviews plant-based methods for producing AuNPs, characterization methods of synthesized AuNPs, and discusses their physiochemical properties. This study also discusses recent breakthroughs and achievements in using green synthesized AuNPs in cancer treatment and different mechanisms of action, such as reactive oxygen species (ROS), mediated mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase activation, leading to apoptosis, etc., for their anticancer and cytotoxic effects. Understanding the mechanisms underlying AuNPs therapeutic efficacy will aid in developing personalized medicines and treatments for cancer as a potential cancer therapeutic strategy.Entities:
Keywords: AuNPs; anticancer; gold nanoparticles; green synthesis; plants; therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34770796 PMCID: PMC8586976 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26216389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Different approaches of metal nanoparticles synthesis.
The effect of Cl− ion concentration and reductant on AuNPs size.
| HAuCl4 (0.25 mM) + 5% |
|
|
|
| 1 | 517 | 19 nm (±7) | |
| 5 | 520 | 25 nm (±11) | |
| 10 | 525 | 38 nm (±21) | |
| 15 | 528 | 40 nm (±31) | |
| 20 | 531 | 47 nm (±36) | |
| HAuCl4 (0.25 mM) + Sodium borohydride (NaBH4) | 0 | 490 | 3 |
| 20 | 520 | 12 |
Figure 2Different shapes available for gold nanoparticles.
Figure 3Green synthesis of AuNPs from a plant. Plant extract and metal salt solution HAuCl4 were mixed. After that, the resultant solution is centrifuged, which results in the bio reduction of metallic ions to AuNPs. Phytochemicals act as reducing, as well as stabilizing/capping, agents in this process. The resultant AuNPs are characterized by using SEM, TEM, FTIR, XRD, etc.
Green synthesis of Gold Nanoparticles (AuNPs) from different plants.
| Plant | Plant Part | Reactive Compound | Salt Solution | Size (nm) | Shape | Characterization | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leaves | Polyphenols, flavonoids, terpenoids | HAuCl4 | 50–100 | Spherical, triangular, | UV-vis Spectroscopy, XRD, FT-IR, DLS, ZP, TEM and EDX. | [ | |
| Leaves | Alcoholic, amine groups, halo compounds | HAuCl4 | 100 | Rod | UV-vis spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, TEM, EDX | [ | |
| Leaves | Polyphenols, quercetin, quercetin-3-glucoside, flavonoids | HAucl4 | 20–40 | Spherical | XRD, EDX, FT-IR, HPLC, TEM, UV-vis spectra, Fluorescence microscopy. | [ | |
| Leaves | Polyphenols, flavonoids, terpenoids | HAuCl4 | 5–40 | Spherical | XRD, UV-visible spectra, FT-IR and TEM | [ | |
| Leaves | Lignans[(+) pinoresinol, (+)-medioresinol], alkaloids, flavonoids, | HAuCl·3H2O | 32 | Hexagonl, spherical | UV-vis spectral analysis. X-ray, XRD, TEM, FTIR, EDX, CV, DPV. | [ | |
| Leaves | Arjunetin, leucoanthoc-yanidins, hydrolyzable tannins | HAuCl4 | 20–25 | Spherical | UV-visible spectra, FT-IR, XRD, AFM and TEM | [ | |
|
| Leaves | Protein, saponins, polyphenols, carbohydrate | HAuCl4, AgNO3 | 15–25 | Spherical, triangular, | UV-visible spectra, FTIR, energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy, TEM, | [ |
|
| Leaves | Terpenoids, flavonoids, thiamine | HAuCl4·3H2O | 17–20 | Spherical | UV-vis, TEM and XRD. | [ |
| Olive | Leaves | Proteins, oleoropein, apigenin-7-glucoside, luteolin-7-glucoside | HAuCl4·3H2O | 50–100 | Triangular, spherical, | UV-vis spectroscopy, photoluminescence, TEM, XRD, FTIR and thermogravimetric analysis. | [ |
|
| Leaves | Antioxidants like sugars, flavonoids | HAuCl4, | 20–30 | Spherical, quasi | UV-vis spectroscopy, TEM and spectro fluorimetry | [ |
| Leaves | Polysaccharides, flavonoids | AuCl3, | 15–25 | Spherical, triangular, | X-ray diffraction, TEM, SEM-EDAX, FT-IR and visible absorption spectroscopy. | [ | |
| Flower | Amino acids | AgNO3, HAuCl4 | 8 | Triangular tetrahedral | UV-vis spectrophotometer, FTIR, XRD, EDX, SEM and HRTEM. | [ | |
| Flower | alkaloids, flavonoids | HAuCl4 | 15–25 | Spherical | UV-vis spectro photometer, TEM, XRD, FTIR, NMR. | [ | |
| Bark | Tannins, proanthocya-nidins, precocene, catechins. | HAuCl4·3H2O, AgNO3 | 20–25 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, FT-IR, XRD, AFM and HR-TEM analyses | [ | |
| Bark | Tannins, alkanoids, flavonoids, alkaloids. | AuCl4H9O4 | 15 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, and HR-TEM. | [ | |
| Bark | Protein, phenols, tannins, terpenoids, | HAuCl4·3H2O | 10-15 | Unshaped, quasispherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, XRD, EDX, TEM, FTIR, DPV. | [ | |
| Peel | Phenolic compounds, gallocatechin, | HAuCl4 | 50 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, TEM, Zeta potential analysis and EDX. | [ | |
| Peel | Phenols, carboxylic acids | HAuCl4 | 3.26–21.68 | Quasi-spherical | UV-vis spectrum, XRD, TEM, and FTIR. | [ | |
| Peel | Polyphenols | HAuCl4 | 60 | Triangular hexagonal | UV spectroscopy, HRTEM, XRD, FESEM, EDX, DLS, and zeta potential analyses. | [ | |
| Fruit | Ursolic acid, iridoid glycosides, monoand | HAuCl4 | 150–300 | Triangular | UV-vis-NIR, TEM, SAED, DLS, and XRD techniques. | [ | |
| Citrus (Lemon, | Fruit | Citric acid, proteins | HAuCl4 | 32.3, 43.4, | Spherical, triangular | UV-visible spectra. TEM XRD, SEAD, DLS. | [ |
| Fruit | Polypeptides/proteins, terpene, ascorbic acid | HAuCl4·4H2O | 15–35 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, SEM, XRD and FTIR. | [ | |
| Pear | Fruit | Sugars, amino acids, proteins | HAuCl4 | 20–400 | Triangular hexagonalpolyhedral | UV-vis spectroscopy, TEM, AFM, XRD, XPS, EDAX. | [ |
| Fruit | Phenolic compounds | HAuCl4 | 9.37–38.12 | Spherical | TEM, X-ray diffraction, UV-vis spectroscopy and FTIR, and X-ray photoelectron spectrometry. | [ | |
| Galls | Monoterpenes, triterpenoids, sterols, | HAuCl4·3H2O | 20–200 | Grain-like | UV-vis spectroscopy, FTIR and SEM. | [ | |
| Seed | Proteins, polysaccharides, glycoprotein | HAuCl4 | 45–75 | Spherical, uneven shape | UV-visible spectroscopy, XRD, FTIR, AFM, FESEM and EDX. | [ | |
| Seed | Polyphenols | HAuCl4 | 150–200 | Spherical | UV-vis-NIR | [ | |
| Latex | isoprene, proteins | AuCl3, Au2Cl6 | 50 | Spherical, triangular | UV-vis spectroscopy, SEM, TG/FT-IR, XED. | [ | |
| Rhizome | Oxalic acid, ascorbic acid, Phenylpropanoids, zingerone. | HAuCl4, AgNO3 | 10–20 | Spherical, triangular, | UV-visible spectroscopy, SEM-EDS, TEM, XRD, FTIR. | [ | |
| Rhizome | Phenolic (curcumin), triterpenoids, alkaloid, sterols. | HAuCl4, | 5–60 | Oblong spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, HR-TEM, thermogravimetric analysis. | [ | |
| Rhizome | Saponin glycoside (ginsenoside), | HAuCl4·3H2O | 2–40 | Spherical | UV-visible spectra, TEM, FTIR. | [ | |
| Rhizome | Asarone, caryophyllene, isoasarone, methyl isoeugenol, safrole. | HAuCl4·3H2O | 10 | Spherical | UV-visible spectral analysis, XRD and FT-IR, SPR, HR-TEM, SEM with EDAX. | [ | |
| Bark | Protein, phenols, tannins, terpenoids, | HAuCl4·3H2O | 10–50 | Unshaped, quasispherical. | UV-vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, EDX, DPV and FTIR. | [ | |
| Bark | Tannins, proanthocya-nidins, precocene, catechins. | HAuCl4·3H2O and AgNO3 | 20–25 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, FT-IR, XRD, AFM and HR-TEM analyses. | [ | |
| Nut | Polyphenols, fats, proteins, carbohydrate, flavonoids. | HAuCl4 | 13.70 | Spherical | UV-visible, TEM, XRD, and FTIR. | [ | |
| Biomass | Proteins | HAuCl4 | 10–80 | Spherical, oval, triangular | UV-visible, FT-IR, XRD, TEM, SPR and EDX | [ | |
| Palm oil | Palm oil | Proteins, flavonoids, reducing sugars, alkaloids | HAuCl4·3H2O | 13–25 | Spherical | UV-vis spectroscopy, TEM, XRD, and FTIR. | [ |
| Whole | Proteins, carbohydrate, antioxidant | HAuCl4·3H2O | 14–17 | Spherical | UV-visible spectroscopy, TEM, XRD and FTIR analysis. | [ |
Showing anticancer activity of gold nanoparticles using plant extracts and characterization technique.
| Sl No. | Plant | Extract Used | Anticancer Activity Type | Characterization | Shape | Size | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
| Hydroethanolic extract | Bladder (T24) and prostate (PC-3) cancer cell line | SPR, UV-Vis spectroscopy, NTA, TEM, EDXS, SAED, FTIR, TGA, | Spherical | 8–15 nm | [ |
| 2 |
| Aqueous extract | Bladder cancer T24 cell line | TEM, SAED, UV-visible spectroscopy, EDX, FTIR, AFM, XRD | Spherical | 20–200 nm | [ |
| 3 |
| Aqueous extract | HeLa cells and normal osteoblasts cell line | UV-Visible Spectroscopy, DLS, Zeta sizer, TEM, FTIR | Spherical | 22.18 ± 2 nm | [ |
| 4 |
| Aqueous water extract | Normal endothelial cells (HUVEC, ECV 304) and cancer cell lines (B16F10, MCF-7, HNGC2 and A549) | UV-visible spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, FTIR, DLS, XPS | Spherical, rod, triangular, hexagonal | 30 nm | [ |
| 5 |
| Orchid plant extract(whole) | Breast cancer AMJ 13 cell lines | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, AFM, FTIR | Spherical | 14–50 nm | [ |
| 6 |
| Ethanolic extract | Breast (MCF7), cervical (HeLa), ovarian (Caov-4) cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, Zetasizer, FTIR, EDX, AFM | Spherical, semispherical, hexagonal, triangular | 20 nm | [ |
| 7 |
| Leaf extract | A549 lung cell line | UV-vis, spectroscopy, AFM, EDS, TEM, FTIR, XRD, SAED | Spherical, anisotropic | 50 nm | [ |
| 8 |
| Aqueous extract | Human colon cancer cell line, HCT-15 | TEM, XRD, FTIR | Hexagonal | 20–40 nm | [ |
| 9 |
| Aqueous extract | Leukemia cell line | UV-vis spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, SEM, TEM | Spherical, triangular, tetragonal, pentagonal | 7–48 nm | [ |
| 10 |
| Fruit extract | Human breast cancer MCF7 cell line and non-diseased RAW264.7 (murine macrophage) cells | UV-vis spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, FETEM, EDX, SAED | Poydispersed, agglomerated | 20–100 nm | [ |
| 11 |
| Aqueous, flower extracts | Hepatic cells (Hep G2) cell line | EDX, SEM | Spherical | 56 nm | [ |
| 12 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | A549 lung cancer cell line and human keratinocyte cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, EDX, FETEM, XRD, DLS | Polygonal, hexagonal | 5–10 nm | [ |
| 13 |
| Aqueous extract | Human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells (HT-29) | UV-Vis spectrophotometry, FTIR, XRD, FESEM, HRTEM, EDX, Zetasizer, DLS | Triangular, spherical | 16 nm | [ |
| 14 |
| Leaf extract | Cervical cancer (HeLa), leukemia (K562) cell lines | UV-Vis spectrophotometry, TEM-SAED, SEM-EDAX, XRD, Zeta potential, DLS, FTIR | Spherical | 11 nm | [ |
| 15 |
| Water extract (seaweed) | Cervical (HeLa), liver (HepG2), breast (MDA-MB-231), leukemia (CEM-ss) cell lines | UV-Vis spectroscopy, SEM, TEM, EDX | Spherical | 3.65 ± 1.69 nm | [ |
| 16 |
| Seed extract | HepG2 cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, DLS, FTIR | Spherical | 16.63 nm | [ |
| 17 |
| Aqueous, Flower extract | MCF-7, normal Vero cell line | UV-Vis, FTIR, XRD, SEM, EDAX | Spherical | 10.1–15.6 nm | [ |
| 18 |
| Fruit extract | Human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, FTIR, Zeta potentiometer | Spherical | 18.28,16 nm | [ |
| 19 |
| Aqueous, fruit extract | Hep2 cells line | UV-Visible spectroscopy, DLS, FTIR, TEM | Spherical, oval | 27 nm | [ |
| 20 |
| Ethanolic leaf extract | Hep-G2 liver cancer cell line | TEM, XRD, EDS, FTIR, UV-Vis spectroscopy | Anisotropic | 13–78 nm | [ |
| 21 |
| Aqueous Leaf extract | PA-1 and A549 cell line | TEM, XRD, EDX, FTIR, UV-Vis spectroscopy | Spherical | 10–40 nm | [ |
| 22 |
| leaf extract | Dalton’s lymphoma | UV-Vis spectroscopy, XRD, SEM, TEM, FTIR | Spherical | 12–20 nm | [ |
| 23 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | A549, HEp-2, MCF-7 cell line | FESEM, HRTEM, FTIR, EDX, XRD, TGA, UV-Vis spectroscopy | Spherical | 11.5–40 nm | [ |
| 24 |
| Bark extract | Thyroid cancer (SW579) cell lines | XRD, HRTEM, SAED, DLS, zeta potential, FTIR, UV-Vis spectroscopy | Spherical | 20 nm | [ |
| 25 |
| Shell extract | MCF7 cells | UV-Vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, | Spherical, triangular | 10–50 nm | [ |
| 26 |
| Leaf extract | Colon cancer cells | UV-Visible spectroscopy, FTIR, TEM, zeta potential, dark field microscopy | Spherical | 57 nm | [ |
| 27 |
| Water extract of leaves | HT-29 cells | UV-Vis spectroscopy, SPR, FTIR, DLS, EDAX, TEM, zeta potential, XRD, TGA | Spherical | 1–20 nm | [ |
| 28 |
| Water extract of Leaves | MCF7 and HepG2 cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, HRTEM, XRD, TEM | Spherical and triangular | 15–28 nm | [ |
| 29 |
| Water extract of leaves | HT29 cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, SEM, EDAX, XRD, FTIR | Spherical | 72.8 nm | [ |
| 30 |
| Water extract of leaves | U87 cell line | UV-vis spectroscopy, XRD, FTIR, XPS, TEM | Spherical | 10–60 nm | [ |
| 31 |
| Water extract of leaf | HeLa cell line | XRD, SEM, EDAX, DLS, FTIR and UV-Vis spectroscopy. | Triangular and spherical | 50–80 nm | [ |
| 32 |
| Water extract of leaves | A549 and SNO cells | DLS, TEM, UV-Vis spectroscopy, zeta potential | Spherical and polyhedral | 10–20 nm | [ |
| 33 |
| Water extract of leaves | HeLa cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, XRD, FTIR | Spherical | 5–35 nm | [ |
| 34 |
| Seed, aqueous extract | HeLa cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectrophotometer, SAED, FTIR, XRD | Spherical | 15.2 nm | [ |
| 35 |
| Root extract | HEPG2 liver cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectrophotometer, HRTEM, FTIR, XRD, PSA | Spherical | 10–30 nm | [ |
| 36 |
| Aqueous extract | Pancreatic cancer cell lines (PANC-1) | UV-visible spectroscopy, TEM, SAED, AFM, FTIR, DLS, EDX | Spherical | 0.4 μm–1 μm | [ |
| 37 |
| Aqueous extract | HT-29, MCF-7 cancer cell line, MCF-12a non cancer cell line | TEM, XRD, UV-Vis spectroscopy, zeta potential, FTIR, EDX, DLS, ICP-AES | Spherical | 12.38 nm | [ |
| 38 |
| Leaf extract | PANC-1 cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, DLS, FTIR, AFM, SAED | Hexagonal, spherical, oval, triangular | 80–12 nm | [ |
| 39 |
| Leaf extract | Human adenocarcinoma breast cancer (MCF-7) cells | UV-Vis spectroscopy, XRD, SAED, FTIR, HRTEM, EDX | Spherical | 13–28 nm | [ |
| 40 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | MCF 7 breast cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, EDAX, SEM, TEM, FTIR | Spherical, circular, triangular | 20–50 nm | [ |
| 41 |
| Latex extract | CHO-K1 cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, XRD, TEM, FTIR | spherical | 9 nm | [ |
| 42 |
| Flower extract | Cervical cancer (HeLa) cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, EDX, XRD, GCMS, TEM, FTIR | Polydisperse (spherical, triangular, hexagonal) | 10–40 nm | [ |
| 43 |
| Leaf extract | MCF-7 cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, XRD, FTIR | Spherical | 10–30 nm | [ |
| 44 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | AGS (Gastric adenocarcinoma) cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, EDX, XRD, FTIR, GCMS | Oval, spherical | 10–30 nm | [ |
| 45 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | Cervical cancer (HeLa) cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, HRTEM, EDX, SAED, AFM, FTIR | Spherical | 20–40 nm | [ |
| 46 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | Lung carcinoma cell line (A549) | UV-Vis spectroscopy, HRTEM, SAED, XRD, EDX, FTIR | Spherical, polygonal | 20–100 nm | [ |
| 47 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | MCF-7 and Caco-2 cells | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, FTIR | Spherical | 20 ± 5 nm | [ |
| 48 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | MCF-7 breast cancer cell line and the HepG2 liver cancer cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, zeta potential, XRD, FTIR | Spherical | 8.40 ± 0.084 nm | [ |
| 49 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | Human cancerous colorectal cell line | UV-Vis spectroscopy, TEM, EDX, FTIR.XRD | Spherical, semi-rod aggregates, flower-shaped nanoparticles | 20–80 nm | [ |
| 50 |
| Aqueous, leaf extract | lung cancer cell line A549 | UV-Vis. spectroscopy, FTIR, XRD, TEM, EDX, AFM | Spherical, triangular, hexagonal | 6–29 nm | [ |
Figure 4Anticancer mechanism of AuNPs. Entry of AuNPs into the cell’s endocytosis or cellular internalization through a lipid bilayer. AuNPs induce the apoptosis of cancerous cells through ROS-mediated mitochondrial dysfunction and caspase activation. AuNPs causes ER stress through the activation of caspase 4 and stress-related proteins, which also results in apoptosis. Damaged mitochondria release AIF, ENDO-G into the nucleus, which causes the final execution of cell death. AuNPs increases the expression of P53 and decreases the expression of CDK2, Cyclin E. It also elevates the expression of apoptotic gene bid, bax/bcl2, which ultimately leads to G0/G1 phase cell-cycle arrest. AuNP induces PCD and apoptosis through the interfering NF-κB signalling pathway.
Figure 5Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in cancer diagnosis.
Gold nanostructures used in imaging-based diagnostics.
| Nanostructure | Tumour Model/Cell Line | Imaging Modality | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| AuNPs | Prostate tumour (PC3) | MRI | [ |
| AuNPs | Prostate tumour (PC3) | CT | [ |
| [198Au]AuNCs | - | SPECT | [ |
| 64CuAuNCs | Breast tumour (4T1) | PET | [ |
| AuNCs | Breast tumour | Fluorescence | [ |
| AuNPs | A431 cells | PAI | [ |
| AuNPs | - | CT | [ |
| Au/Ag hybrid nanoparticles | SKOV3 | PA | [ |
| AuNU-pHLIP | MCF-7 | CT/PA | [ |
| AuNR-SiO2-PFP | A375 | US/PA | [ |
| DT-AuNR/PDA bowl spadix-bract NP | Hep-G2, HeLa, MCF-7 | CT/PA | [ |
| BL-Au NPs | Zebrafish model | CT | [ |