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Articles

Evaluation of cytotoxicity and biodistribution of mesoporous carbon nanotubes (pristine/-OH/-COOH) to HepG2 cells in vitro and healthy mice in vivo

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Pages 895-912 | Received 04 Apr 2022, Accepted 14 Jan 2023, Published online: 26 Jan 2023
 

Abstract

Mesoporous carbon nanotubes (mCNTs) hold great promise interests, owing to their superior nano-platform properties for biomedicine. To fully utilize this potential, the toxicity and biodistribution of pristine and surface-modified mCNTs (-OH/-COOH) should preferentially be addressed. The results of cell viability suggested that pristine mCNTs induced cell death in a concentration-dependent manner. As evidence of reactive oxygen species (ROS), malondialdehyde (MDA) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), pristine mCNTs induced noticeable redox imbalance. 99mTc tracing data suggested that the cellular uptake of pristine mCNTs posed a concentrate-dependent and energy-dependent manner via macropinocytotic and clathrin-dependent pathways, and the main accumulated organs were lung, liver and spleen. With OH modification, the ROS generation, MDA deposition and SOD consumption were evidently reduced compared with the pristine mCNTs at 24/48 h high-dose exposure. With COOH modification, the modified mCNTs only showed a significant difference in SOD consumption at 24/48 h exposure, but there was no significant difference in the measurement of ROS and MDA. The internalization mechanism and organ distribution of modified mCNTs were basically invariant. Together, our study provides evidence that mCNTs and the modified mCNTs all could induce oxidative damage and thereby impair cells. 99mTc-mCNTs can effectively trace the distribution of nanotubes in vivo.

Ethics approval

All animal experiments were performed according to the guidelines of ethical review of laboratory animal welfare and approved by Peking University Animal Studies Committee (J202191).

Author contributions

Yujing Du: Conceptualization, Methodology, Formal analysis, Investigation, Writing – original draft. Zhipei Chen: Validation, Investigation. M. Irfan Hussain: Writing – review & editing. Ping Yan: Supervision. Chunli Zhang: Methodology, Supervision. Yan Fan: Supervision, Resources. Lei Kang: Validation. Jianhua Zhang: Conceptualization, Supervision, Data curation. Rongfu Wang: Conceptualization, Supervision. Xiaona Ren: Conceptualization, Data curation, Methodology, Writing – review & editing. Changchun Ge: Conceptualization.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Data availability statement

All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article and its supplementary information files.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Beijing TCM Science and Technology Foundation [no. J-2020-04], Interdisciplinary clinical research project of Peking University First Hospital [no. 2021CR32], the Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Project [no. Z181100001618017] and Fundamental research Funds for the central universities [no. FRF-TP-20-006A2].

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