Effectiveness of Nonfunctionalized Graphene Oxide Nanolayers as Nanomedicine against Colon, Cervical, and Breast Cancer Cells.
Mohammad Rafe HatshanQuaiser SaquibMaqsood A SiddiquiMohammad FaisalJaved AhmadAbdulaziz A Al-KhedhairyMohammed Rafi ShaikMujeeb KhanRizwan WahabValeria De MatteisSyed Farooq AdilPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Recent studies in nanomedicine have intensively explored the prospective applications of surface-tailored graphene oxide (GO) as anticancer entity. However, the efficacy of nonfunctionalized graphene oxide nanolayers (GRO-NLs) as an anticancer agent is less explored. In this study, we report the synthesis of GRO-NLs and their in vitro anticancer potential in breast (MCF-7), colon (HT-29), and cervical (HeLa) cancer cells. GRO-NLs-treated HT-29, HeLa, and MCF-7 cells showed cytotoxicity in the MTT and NRU assays via defects in mitochondrial functions and lysosomal activity. HT-29, HeLa, and MCF-7 cells treated with GRO-NLs exhibited substantial elevations in ROS, disturbances of the mitochondrial membrane potential, an influx of Ca 2+ , and apoptosis. The qPCR quantification showed the upregulation of caspase 3 , caspase 9 , bax , and SOD1 genes in GRO-NLs-treated cells. Western blotting showed the depletion of P21, P53, and CDC25C proteins in the above cancer cell lines after GRO-NLs treatment, indicating its function as a mutagen to induce mutation in the P53 gene, thereby affecting P53 protein and downstream effectors P21 and CDC25C. In addition, there may be a mechanism other than P53 mutation that controls P53 dysfunction. We conclude that nonfunctionalized GRO-NLs exhibit prospective biomedical application as a putative anticancer entity against colon, cervical, and breast cancers.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- breast cancer cells
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell proliferation
- systematic review
- poor prognosis
- young adults
- gene expression
- cell cycle
- newly diagnosed
- genome wide identification
- protein protein
- cancer therapy
- dna methylation
- small molecule
- combination therapy