Title of article
Biomedical potential of the reactive oxygen species generation and quenching by fullerenes (C60)
Author/Authors
Zoran Markovic، نويسنده , , Vladimir Trajkovic، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
13
From page
3561
To page
3573
Abstract
Fullerene (C60), a third carbon allotrope, is a classical engineered material with the potential application in biomedicine. One of the biologically most relevant features of C60 is the ability to quench various free radicals, behaving as a “free radical sponge”. Conversely, photosensitization of C60 leads to its transition to a long-lived triplet excited state and the subsequent energy or electron transfer to molecular oxygen, yielding highly reactive singlet oxygen (1O2) or superoxide anion (O2 −), respectively. These reactive oxygen species (ROS) react with a wide range of biological targets and are known to be involved in both cellular signaling and cell damage. Therefore, the dual property of fullerenes to either quench or generate cell-damaging ROS could be potentially exploited for their development as cytoprotective or cytotoxic anticancer/antimicrobial agents. However, the attempts to that effect have been hampered by the extremely low water solubility of C60, and by the fact that solubilization procedures profoundly influence the ROS-generating/quenching properties of C60, either through chemical modification or through formation of complex nanoscale particles with different photophysical properties. We here analyze the mechanisms and biological consequences of ROS generation/quenching by C60, focusing on the influence that different physico-chemical alterations exert on its ROS-related biological behavior.
Keywords
CarbonNanoparticleAntioxidantCytotoxicity
Journal title
Biomaterials
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Biomaterials
Record number
483167
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