Background:
graphene oxide (GO)-based systems are among the drug delivery systems and have drawn a lot of interest in the field of medicine.
Methods:
In this work, two novel phosphoramides with the formulas of (NHCHCH2C(CH3)2NHC(CH3)2CH2P(S)(OEt)2 (L1) and (NHCHCH2C(CH3)2NHC(CH3)2CH2P (O) (NHC6H5) (OC5H6) (L2) were synthesized and characterized by spectroscopic methods. Then, graphene oxide (GO) was functionalized by L1 and L2. FT-IR, XRD, FE- SEM/ MAP, and Zeta potential analyses were applied to confirm the synthesis of phosphoramide-functionalized graphene oxides (GO-L1 and GO-L2). Cytotoxicity of synthesized compounds was evaluated against breast cancer cell line (SK-BR-3) using MTT assay. Moreover, the flow cytometry assay was performed to evaluate the cell death mechanisms.
Results:
The results showed that GO-L1 and GO-L2 had more inhibitory effect against cancer cells than that of L1 and L2, and GO-L2 showed the highest cytotoxicity with IC50 value of 38.13 µg/ml. The Quantum calculations were employed to optimize structures. HOMO and LUMO energy values, and physical adsorption of synthesized compounds were obtained by the DMol3 module in Material studio 2017. The docking studies were used to investigate the binding of L1, L2, GO-L1, and GO-L2 to DNA polymerase IIα.
Conclusion:
Anticancer activity of phosphoramide compounds was increased after attachment on GO surface and the docking studies' results were in good accordance with the experimental cytotoxicity results.
In the present study, a new water-soluble proton transfer cytotoxic compound (dpp)(dapt).H2O (Dx) (where dpp = diphenylphosphinate and dapt = 2,6-diamino-4-phenyl-1,3,5-triazin-1-ium ) was synthesized and characterized by IR and NMR...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.