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  4. Graphene oxide nanocells for impairing topoisomerase and DNA in cancer cells
 
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Graphene oxide nanocells for impairing topoisomerase and DNA in cancer cells

Source
Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Author(s)
A., Nandi, Aditi
C., Ghosh, Chandramouli
A., Bajpai, Aman
S., Basu, Sudipta  
DOI
10.1039/c9tb00336c
Volume
7
Issue
26
Start Page
22-06-1911
End Page
4197
Abstract
DNA topoisomerases and nuclear DNA are important targets for cancer therapy. However, DNA topoisomerase inhibitors and DNA damaging drugs demonstrate a large window of side effects in the clinic. Graphene oxide based biocompatible and biodegradable nano-scale materials have the potential to overcome this complication. However, encompassing different topoisomerase inhibitors along with DNA damaging drugs into 2D-graphene oxide remains a main challenge. To address this, in this manuscript, we have engineered self-assembled spherical 3D-graphene oxide nanoparticles coated with lipid (GO-nanocells) which can concomitantly load and release multiple topoisomerase inhibitors (topotecan and doxorubicin) and DNA damaging drug (cisplatin) in a controlled manner. Fluorescence confocal microscopy confirmed that these GO-nanocells were taken up by HeLa cervical cancer cells and transported into lysosomes temporally over 6 h. A combination of confocal microscopy, gel electrophoresis, and flow cytometry studies revealed that these GO-nanocells damaged nuclear DNA along with topoisomerase inhibition leading to induction of apoptosis through cell cycle arrest in the G2-M phase. These GO-nanocells killed HeLa cancer cells with remarkably greater efficacy compared to a free drug cocktail at 48 h post-incubation. These self-assembled GO-nanocells can serve as a nanoscale tool to perturb multiple therapeutically important sub-cellular targets simultaneously for improved efficacy in future cancer chemotherapy. � 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Unpaywall
Sherpa Url
https://v2.sherpa.ac.uk/id/publication/25609
URI
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85068448193&doi=10.1039%2Fc9tb00336c&partnerID=40&md5=0cf4ce8ee656fcc3c007347feb45e817
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/29382
Keywords
Biocompatibility
Cell death
Chemotherapy
Confocal microscopy
Controlled drug delivery
Diseases
Drug interactions
Electrophoresis
Graphene oxide
Lanthanum compounds
Nanotechnology
Targeted drug delivery
3d graphene oxides
Cancer Chemotherapy
Cervical cancer cells
DNA topoisomerase
Fluorescence confocal microscopy
Gel electrophoresis
Nano-scale materials
Topoisomerase inhibitions
DNA
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