Computational assessment of the use of graphene-based nanosheets as Pt II chemotherapeutics delivery systems.
Daniele BellettoVincenzo VignaPierraffaele BarrettaFortuna PonteGloria MazzoneStefano ScodittiEmilia SiciliaPublished in: Journal of computational chemistry (2024)
Graphene is the newest form of elemental carbon and it is becoming rapidly a potential candidate in the framework of nano-bio research. Many reports confirm the successful use of graphene-based materials as carriers of anticancer drugs having relatively high loading capacities compared with other nanocarriers. Here, the outcomes of a systematic study of the adsorption behavior of FDA approved Pt II drugs cisplatin, oxaliplatin, and carboplatin on surface models of pristine, holey, and nitrogen-doped holey graphene are reported. DFT investigations in water solvent have been carried out considering several initial orientations of the drugs with respect to the surfaces. Adsorption free energies, calculated including basis set superposition error (BSSE) corrections, result to be significantly negative for many of the drug@carrier adducts indicating that tested layers could be used as potential carriers for the delivery of anticancer Pt II drugs. The reduced density gradient (RDG) analysis allows to show that many kinds of non-covalent interactions, including canonical H-bond, are responsible for the stabilization of the formed adducts.
Keyphrases
- walled carbon nanotubes
- room temperature
- carbon nanotubes
- drug induced
- drug delivery
- density functional theory
- squamous cell carcinoma
- aqueous solution
- type diabetes
- staphylococcus aureus
- risk assessment
- human health
- escherichia coli
- emergency department
- adipose tissue
- molecular docking
- adverse drug
- electronic health record
- phase ii study
- drug release
- rectal cancer
- molecular dynamics simulations
- candida albicans