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Polymer-Coated Cerium Oxide Nanoparticles as Oxidoreductase-like Catalysts.

Victor BaldimNisha YadavNicolas BiaAlain GraillotCédric LoubatSanjay SinghAjay S KarakotiJean-François Berret
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
Cerium oxide nanoparticles have been shown to mimic oxidoreductase enzymes by catalyzing the decomposition of organic substrates and reactive oxygen species. This mimicry can be found in superoxide radicals and hydrogen peroxides, which are harmful molecules produced in oxidative stress-associated diseases. Despite the fact that nanoparticle functionalization is mandatory in the context of nanomedicine, the influence of polymer coatings on their enzyme-like catalytic activity is poorly understood. In this work, six polymer-coated cerium oxide nanoparticles are prepared by the association of 7.8 nm cerium oxide cores with two poly(sodium acrylate) and four poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-grafted copolymers with different terminal or anchoring end groups, such as phosphonic acids. The superoxide dismutase-, catalase-, peroxidase-, and oxidase-like catalytic activities of the coated nanoparticles were systematically studied. It is shown that the polymer coatings do not affect the superoxide dismutase-like, impair the catalase-like and oxidase-like, and surprisingly improves peroxidase-like catalytic activities of cerium oxide nanoparticles. It is also demonstrated that the particles coated with the PEG-grafted copolymers perform better than the poly(acrylic acid)-coated ones as oxidoreductase-like enzymes, a result that confirms the benefit of having phosphonic acids as anchoring groups at the particle surface.
Keyphrases
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • oxidative stress
  • reactive oxygen species
  • drug delivery
  • dna damage
  • photodynamic therapy
  • nitric oxide
  • cancer therapy
  • signaling pathway
  • crystal structure
  • heat shock protein