Login / Signup

Effective-by-method for the preparation of folic acid-coated TiO 2 nanoparticles with high targeting potential for apoptosis induction against bladder cancer cells (T24).

Demiana H HannaMarina M AzizE El Shafee
Published in: Biotechnology and applied biochemistry (2023)
The research's goal is to create the surfaces of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO 2 NPs) in a layer of folic acid (FA) that can effectively target human bladder cancer cells (T24). An efficient method for creating FA-coated TiO 2 NPs was used, and many tools have been used to analyze its physicochemical properties. The cytotoxic effects of FA-coated NPs on T24 cells and the mechanisms of apoptosis generation were examined employing a variety of methodologies. The prepared FA-coated TiO 2 NPs suspensions with a hydrodynamic diameter around 37 nm and a negative surface charge of -30 mV reduced T24 cell proliferation with stronger IC 50 value (21.8 ± 1.9 μg/ml) than TiO 2 NPs (47.8 ± 2.5 μg/ml). This toxicity resulted in apoptosis induction (16.63%) that was caused through enhanced reactive oxygen species formation and stopping the cell cycle over G2/M phase. Moreover, FA-TiO 2 NPs raised the expression levels of P53, P21, BCL2L4, and cleaved Caspase-3, while decreasing Bcl-2, Cyclin B, and CDK1 in treated cells. Overall, these findings revealed efficient targeting of the FA-TiO 2 NPs resulted in increasing cellular internalization caused increased apoptosis in T24 cells. As a result, FA-TiO 2 NPs might be a viable treatment for human bladder cancer.
Keyphrases