| Literature DB >> 36234727 |
Navid Rabiee1,2, Siavash Iravani3, Rajender S Varma4.
Abstract
Today, sustainable and natural resources including biowastes have been considered attractive starting materials for the fabrication of biocompatible and biodegradable carbon dots (CDs) due to the benefits of availability, low cost, biorenewability, and environmentally benign attributes. These carbonaceous nanomaterials have been widely explored in the field of sensing/imaging, optoelectronics, photocatalysis, drug/gene delivery, tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, and cancer theranostics. Designing multifunctional biowaste-derived CDs with a high efficacy-to-toxicity ratio for sustained and targeted drug delivery, along with imaging potentials, opens a new window of opportunity toward theranostic applications. However, crucial challenges regarding the absorption/emission wavelength, up-conversion emission/multiphoton fluorescence mechanisms, and phosphorescence of these CDs still need to be addressed to attain the maximum functionality and efficacy. Future studies ought to focus on optimizing the synthesis techniques/conditions, evaluating the influence of nucleation/growth process on structures/properties, controlling their morphology/size, and finding the photoluminescence mechanisms. Reproducibility of synthesis techniques is another critically important factor that needs to be addressed in the future. Herein, the recent developments related to the biowaste-derived CDs with respect to their biomedical applications are deliberated, focusing on important challenges and future perspectives.Entities:
Keywords: biocompatibility; biomedical applications; biowaste-derived carbon dots; green chemistry; sustainability; valorization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36234727 PMCID: PMC9573568 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27196186
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Advantages/properties and biomedical applications of biowaste-derived CDs.
Some selected examples of biowaste-derived CDs with their fascinating biomedical potential.
| Sources | Synthesis Methods | Biomedical Potentials | Size | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pyrolysis method | Fe(III) ions sensing, bactericidal performance, and bioimaging | 4–7 | [ | |
| Jackfruit peel and tamarind peel precursors | Hydrothermal synthesis | Anticancer and antitumor activity | 6.4 | [ |
| Hydrothermal-carbonization method | Cell labeling agents for mesenchymal stem cells and breast/thyroid cancerous cells; in vitro imaging | 5 | [ | |
| Sugarcane bagasse char | Hydrothermal synthesis | Drug delivery of acetaminophen | 7.5 | [ |
| Sugarcane baggage | Hydrothermal synthesis | Bio-imaging/bio-labeling applications | 2–8 | [ |
| Waste tea leaves; peanut shells | Hydrothermal synthesis | Biosensing; biomarkers | <10 | [ |
| Crab shells | Sonochemical technique | Cell imaging; theranostic applications | <10 | [ |
| Silkworm cocoon | Pyrolysis method | Anti- inflammatory potentials | 2.26–9.35 | [ |
| Expired passion fruit shells | Hydrothermal synthesis | Imaging; fluorescent probe | <5 | [ |
| Oxidative pyrolysis technique | Biosensing/cell labeling; biomarker detection (in vitro) | <10 | [ |
Figure 2(A) The preparative process of CDs using C. Limetta waste pulp. (B) (I) High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HR-TEM) image (scale bar: 100 nm), (II) lattice fringe analysis (scale bar: 10 nm). (C) OD600 measurements of bacterial cultures incubated with CDs with different mM for analyzing minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC). (D) The viability analysis of cells treated with CDs using CKK8 assay. Reproduced with permission from Ref [37]. Copyright 2018 American Chemical Society.
Figure 3(A) The preparative process of magnetofluorescent CQDs through a microwave-assisted hydrothermal technique. (B) Fluorescence images of (a–d) HeLa and (e–h) HepG2 cells incubated with folic acid (FA)–Gd@CQDs (Scale bars = 40 μm). T1-weighted (i) HeLa and (j) HepG2 cellular magnetic resonance images of FA–Gd@CQDs at different concentrations are illustrated. MFCQDs: magnetofluorescent CQDs. Reproduced with permission from Ref [53]. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society.
Figure 4(A) The preparative process of CDs derived from H. bambusae (HBCDs) with bimodal fluorescence/photoacoustic imaging and synergistic photodynamic/photothermal therapy potentials. (B) Cell viability analyses of HeLa cells treated with biowaste-derived CDs. (C) Infrared thermal images of mice post various treatments (I). Photographs of mice post different treatments (II). The growth curves of tumors during various treatments (III). DMF: dimethylformamide. Reproduced with permission from Ref [54]. Copyright 2018 Elsevier.