Surface Coating of Carbon Nanofiber by Mesoporous Silica: a Promising Strategy to Reduce its Toxicity during Embryogenesis
Abstract
Although carbon nanofibers (CNFs) have been implicated in biomedical
applications, they are still considered as a potential hazard. Conversely, mesoporous
silica nanoparticles are generally considered as a suitable and biocompatible material
for in-vivo use. In this study, we sought to discover a novel strategy leads as a potential
approach to overcome CNFs toxicity. We fabricated conventional CNFs and novel
CNFs coated with a mesoporous silica layer (MCNFs). They were synthesized by
preparing polyacrylonitrile fibers via electrospinning, followed by carbonization at 800
C in an inert atmosphere. A soft templating strategy was applied to coat CNFs with a
mesoporous silica layer. The obtained nanofibers were then characterized by various
analytical techniques.
Subsequently, we used avian embryos at 3 days and its chorioallantoic membrane
(CAM) at 6 days of incubation to evaluate the impact of synthesized CNFs and MCNFs
on the early stage of embryogenesis and angiogenesis. We confirmed our
embryogenesis data using Drosophila melanogaster. Furthermore, we analyzed the
outcome of the effect of CNFs and MCNFs on normal embryonic fibroblast cells. Our
data show that mesoporous coating of CNFs resulted in significantly reducing both,
embryotoxicity and angiogenesis of the CAM. Additionally, we elucidate key regulator
genes of embryotoxicity induced by CNFs and MCNFs; thus, RT-PCR analysis was
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/17744Collections
- Master in Pharmacy [58 items ]