Metallic nanoparticles, in particular gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), offer a wide spectrum of applications in biomedicine. A crucial issue is their cytotoxicity, which depends greatly on various factors, including morphology of nanoparticles. Because metallic nanoparticles have an effect on cell membrane integrity, their shape and size may affect the viability of cells, due to their different geometries as well as physical and chemical interactions with cell membranes. Variations in the size and shape of gold nanoparticles may indicate particular nanoparticle morphologies that provide strong cytotoxicity effects. Synthesis of different sized and shaped bare AuNPs was performed with spherical (~ 10 nm), nanoflowers (~ 370 nm), nanorods (~ 41 nm), nanoprisms (~ 160 nm) and nanostars (~ 240 nm) morphologies. These nanostructures were characterized and interacting with cancer (HeLa) and normal (HEK293T) cell lines and cell viability tests were performed by WST-1 tests and fluorescent live/dead cell imaging experiments. It was shown that various shapes and sizes of gold nanostructures may affect the viability of the cells. Gold nanospheres and nanorods proved to be more toxic than star, flower and prism gold nanostructures. This may be attributed to their small size and aggregation process. This is the first report concerning a comparison of cytotoxic profile in vitro with a wide spectrum of bare AuNPs morphology. The findings show their possible use in biomedical applications.
Due to development of nanotechnology and gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) increasing use in different areas of medicine, especially in oncology, better understanding of their potential cytotoxicity is necessary to protect patients safety. Shape and size of AuNPs is an important modulator of their cytotoxicity. Therefore, we investigated the cytotoxicity of AuNPs rods (≈39 nm length, 18 nm width), AuNPs stars (≈ 215 nm) and AuNPs spheres (≈ 6.3 nm) against human fetal osteoblast (hFOB 1.19), osteosarcoma (143B, MG63) and pancreatic duct cell (hTERT-HPNE) lines by MTT and neutral-red uptake assay. Moreover, influence of AuNPs on level of proapoptotic protein (Bax) and anti-apoptotic protein (Bcl-2) was measured by western blot. Cellular uptake of nanoparticles and ultrastructure changes were examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). In the present study we have proven that AuNPs stars are the most cytotoxic against human cells. We observed that cancer cells are more susceptible to AuNPs cytotoxic effect. Furthermore, AuNPs rods and AuNPs stars caused increased expression of Bax and decreased expression of Bcl-2 protein in osteosarcoma cells. We found that AuNPs penetrated through the cell membrane and caused ultrastructural changes. Our results clearly demonstrated that the cytotoxicity of AuNPs was shape-dependent. AuNPs stars with the highest anti-cancer potential were also the most cytotoxic type of tested NPs, whereas AuNPs spheres which appears to be the safest one had small anti-cancer potential.
The
development of a photocatalyst with remarkable activity to
degrade pollutants in aqueous and gas phase requires visible light-responsive
stable materials, easily organized in the form of a thin layer (to
exclude the highly expensive separation step). In this work, we present
a one-step strategy for synthesizing material in the form of a self-organized
TiO2/Ag2O nanotube (NT) array interlaced with
silver nanoparticles (as in a cake with raisins) that exhibited photoactivity
significantly enhanced compared to that of pristine TiO2 NTs under both ultraviolet (UV) and visible (vis) irradiation. An
NT array composed of a mixture of TiO2 and Ag2O and spiked with Ag nanoparticles was formed via the anodization
of a Ti–Ag alloy in a one-step reaction. Silver NPs have been
formed during the in situ generation of Ag ions and
were (i) embedded in the NT walls, (ii) stuck on the external NT walls,
and (iii) placed inside the NTs. The enhancement of photocatalytic
efficiency can be ascribed to the existence of an optimal content
of Ag2O and Ag NPs, which are responsible for decreasing
the number of recombination centers. In contrast to UV–vis
light, performance improvement under vis irradiation occurs with increasing
Ag2O and Ag0 contents in the TiO2/Ag2O/Ag NTs as a result of the utilization of larger
amounts of incident photons. The optimized samples reached phenol
degradation rates of 0.50 and 2.89 μmol dm–3 min–1 under visible and UV light, respectively,
which means degradation activities 3.8- and 2-fold greater than that
of the reference sample, respectively, remained after four photodegradation
cycles under UV light.
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