Composite
coating of antibiotic gentamicin (Gent), natural polymer
chitosan (CS), and hydroxyapatite (HAP) was successfully assessed
by applying the electrophoretic deposition (EPD) technique. EPD was
performed under optimized deposition conditions (5 V, 12 min) on pure
titanium plates, to obtain HAP/CS and HAP/CS/Gent composite coatings
in a single step from three-component aqueous suspension, with favorable
antibacterial properties. Composite coatings were characterized by
X-ray diffraction (XRD), field emission scanning electron microscopy,
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis,
and X-ray photoelectron analysis, confirming the formation of composite
HAP/CS and HAP/CS/Gent coatings on the titanium surface, which is
due to intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Employing the XRD technique,
HAP was detected by obtaining the characteristic diffraction maximums.
Good antibacterial activity of the composite coating loaded with antibiotic
(HAP/CS/Gent) was confirmed against Staphylococcus
aureus and Escherichia coli, pointing to the high potential for bioapplication. Introduction
of gentamicin in HAP/CS/Gent coating caused very mild cytotoxicity
in the tested cell lines MRC-5 and L929. MTT testing was used to evaluate
cell viability, and HAP/CS was classified as noncytotoxic.
The cytotoxicity of the diterpene alcohol, phytol, was evaluated by using the MTT assay in vitro against seven tumour cells and one normal cell of human origin. The compound tested induced concentration-dependent cytotoxic response in all cell lines, demonstrating to be most and least effective against the breast adenocarcinoma MCF-7 and the prostate adenocarcinoma PC-3 cells, respectively (IC50 8.79 ± 0.41 μM and 77.85 ± 1.93 μM). The IC50 values towards the other five tumours (HeLa, HT-29, A-549, Hs294T and MDA-MB-231) ranged from 15.51 to 69.67 μM. However, mild toxicity was detected against the foetal lung fibroblast MRC-5 cells at the concentrations used (IC50 124.84 ± 1.59 μM). According to the experimental data obtained, this cost-effective natural product widely present in the biosphere may inspire the development of new drug-like substances with improved cytotoxic activity on breast cancer.
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