Arresting cancer proliferation by controlling the surface crystallinity of carbon materials without generating reactive oxygen species

Jungil Choi, Soyoung Lee, Wenping Wang, Soo Hyun Hahm, Ye Sun Han, Tae Hyun Nam, Sang Hyun Kim, Sang Soo Kang, Dongwoo Khang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study demonstrated that the surface crystallinity of carbon nanostructures is an additional independent factor that should be considered for the inhibition of cancer proliferation without activating reactive oxygen species (ROS). In addition, cytotoxic evaluation of both proliferating cancer cells and fully differentiated nerve cells (i.e. non-proliferative) showed selective cytotoxicity: single-walled and highly crystalline carbon nanostructures aggressively inhibited the proliferation of glioma cancer cells, but exhibited no notable cytotoxicity effects on differentiated nerve cells. Although single-wall carbon nanotubes have been shown to elicit potent proinflammatory responses by means of trigger ROS, our results demonstrated that highly crystalline carbon structures can be utilized as a selective antiproliferative agent against brain tumor cells without increasing the ROS level and without significant cytotoxic effects to adjacent nerve cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3457-3467
Number of pages11
JournalActa Biomaterialia
Volume8
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2012

Keywords

  • Cancer proliferation
  • Carbon nanostructures
  • Crystallinity
  • Cytotoxicity
  • Reactive oxygen species

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