论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
Authors Zhang T, Tang M, Zhang SS, Hu YY, Li H, Zhang T, Xue YY, Pu YP
Received 28 September 2016
Accepted for publication 11 January 2017
Published 27 February 2017 Volume 2017:12 Pages 1539—1554
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S123345
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Akshita Wason
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Linlin Sun
Abstract: The numerous increasing use of carbon nanotubes (CNTs)
derived from nanotechnology has raised concerns about their biosafety and
potential toxicity. CNTs cause immunologic dysfunction and limit the
application of CNTs in biomedicine. The immunological responses induced by
pristine multi-walled carbon nanotubes (p-MWCNTs) and PEGylated multi-walled
carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs-PEG) on BALB/c mice via an intravenous administration
were investigated. The results reflect that the p-MWCNTs induced significant
increases in spleen, thymus, and lung weight. Mice treated with p-MWCNTs showed
altered lymphocyte populations (CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, and CD19+) in peripheral blood and increased serum IgM and
IgG levels, and splenic macrophage ultrastructure indicated mitochondria
swelling. p-MWCNTs inhibited humoral and cellular immunity function and were
associated with decreased immune responses against sheep erythrocytes and serum
hemolysis level. Natural killer (NK) activity was not modified by two types of
MWCNTs. In comparison with two types of MWCNTs, for a same dose, p-MWCNTs caused
higher levels of inflammation and immunosuppression than MWCNTs-PEG. The
results of immunological function suggested that after intravenous
administration with p-MWCNTs caused more damage to systemic immunity than
MWCNTs- PEG. Here, we demonstrated that a surface functional modification on
MWCNTs reduces their immune perturbations in vivo. The chemistry-modified
MWCNTs change their preferred immune response in vivo and reduce the
immunotoxicity of p-MWCNTs.
Keywords: multi-walled carbon nanotubes, surface-functionalized,
immunotoxicity, BALB/c mice, immunosuppression