Cargando…

A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment

Fluorescent Carbon dots (CDs) derived from biologically active sources have shown enhanced activities compared to their precursors. With their prominent potentiality, these small-sized (<10nm) nanomaterials could be easily synthesized from organic sources either by bottom-up or green approach. Th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ahmad, Musbahu Adam, Aung, Yu-yu, Widati, Alfa Akustia, Sakti, Satya Candra Wibawa, Sumarsih, Sri, Irzaman, Irzaman, Yuliarto, Brian, Chang, Jia-yaw, Fahmi, Mochamad Zakki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9925355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36793348
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ntno.80076
_version_ 1784888049926144000
author Ahmad, Musbahu Adam
Aung, Yu-yu
Widati, Alfa Akustia
Sakti, Satya Candra Wibawa
Sumarsih, Sri
Irzaman, Irzaman
Yuliarto, Brian
Chang, Jia-yaw
Fahmi, Mochamad Zakki
author_facet Ahmad, Musbahu Adam
Aung, Yu-yu
Widati, Alfa Akustia
Sakti, Satya Candra Wibawa
Sumarsih, Sri
Irzaman, Irzaman
Yuliarto, Brian
Chang, Jia-yaw
Fahmi, Mochamad Zakki
author_sort Ahmad, Musbahu Adam
collection PubMed
description Fluorescent Carbon dots (CDs) derived from biologically active sources have shown enhanced activities compared to their precursors. With their prominent potentiality, these small-sized (<10nm) nanomaterials could be easily synthesized from organic sources either by bottom-up or green approach. Their sources could influence the functional groups present on the CDs surfaces. A crude source of organic molecules has been used to develop fluorescent CDs. In addition, pure organic molecules were also valuable in developing practical CDs. Physiologically responsive interaction of CDs with various cellular receptors is possible due to the robust functionalization on their surface. In this review, we studied various literatures from the past ten years that reported the potential application of carbon dots as alternatives in cancer chemotherapy. The selective cytotoxic nature of some of the CDs towards cancer cell lines suggests the role of surface functional groups towards selective interaction, which results in over-expressed proteins characteristic of cancer cell lines. It could be inferred that cheaply sourced CDs could selectively bind to overexpressed proteins in cancer cells with the ultimate effect of cell death induced by apoptosis. In most cases, CDs-induced apoptosis directly or indirectly follows the mitochondrial pathway. Therefore, these nanosized CDs could serve as alternatives to the current kinds of cancer treatments that are expensive and have numerous side effects.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9925355
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Ivyspring International Publisher
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99253552023-02-14 A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment Ahmad, Musbahu Adam Aung, Yu-yu Widati, Alfa Akustia Sakti, Satya Candra Wibawa Sumarsih, Sri Irzaman, Irzaman Yuliarto, Brian Chang, Jia-yaw Fahmi, Mochamad Zakki Nanotheranostics Review Fluorescent Carbon dots (CDs) derived from biologically active sources have shown enhanced activities compared to their precursors. With their prominent potentiality, these small-sized (<10nm) nanomaterials could be easily synthesized from organic sources either by bottom-up or green approach. Their sources could influence the functional groups present on the CDs surfaces. A crude source of organic molecules has been used to develop fluorescent CDs. In addition, pure organic molecules were also valuable in developing practical CDs. Physiologically responsive interaction of CDs with various cellular receptors is possible due to the robust functionalization on their surface. In this review, we studied various literatures from the past ten years that reported the potential application of carbon dots as alternatives in cancer chemotherapy. The selective cytotoxic nature of some of the CDs towards cancer cell lines suggests the role of surface functional groups towards selective interaction, which results in over-expressed proteins characteristic of cancer cell lines. It could be inferred that cheaply sourced CDs could selectively bind to overexpressed proteins in cancer cells with the ultimate effect of cell death induced by apoptosis. In most cases, CDs-induced apoptosis directly or indirectly follows the mitochondrial pathway. Therefore, these nanosized CDs could serve as alternatives to the current kinds of cancer treatments that are expensive and have numerous side effects. Ivyspring International Publisher 2023-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9925355/ /pubmed/36793348 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ntno.80076 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Review
Ahmad, Musbahu Adam
Aung, Yu-yu
Widati, Alfa Akustia
Sakti, Satya Candra Wibawa
Sumarsih, Sri
Irzaman, Irzaman
Yuliarto, Brian
Chang, Jia-yaw
Fahmi, Mochamad Zakki
A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title_full A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title_fullStr A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title_full_unstemmed A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title_short A Perspective on Using Organic Molecules Composing Carbon Dots for Cancer Treatment
title_sort perspective on using organic molecules composing carbon dots for cancer treatment
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9925355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36793348
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ntno.80076
work_keys_str_mv AT ahmadmusbahuadam aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT aungyuyu aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT widatialfaakustia aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT saktisatyacandrawibawa aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT sumarsihsri aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT irzamanirzaman aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT yuliartobrian aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT changjiayaw aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT fahmimochamadzakki aperspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT ahmadmusbahuadam perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT aungyuyu perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT widatialfaakustia perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT saktisatyacandrawibawa perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT sumarsihsri perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT irzamanirzaman perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT yuliartobrian perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT changjiayaw perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment
AT fahmimochamadzakki perspectiveonusingorganicmoleculescomposingcarbondotsforcancertreatment