Cell cycle dependent cellular uptake of zinc oxide nanoparticles in human epidermal cells

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Abstract

Metal oxide nanoparticles (NPs), including zinc oxide (ZnO) NPs have shown success for use as vehicles for drug delivery and targeting gene delivery in many diseases like cancer. Current anticancer chemotherapeutics fail to effectively differentiate between cancerous and normal cells. There is an urgent need to develop novel drug delivery system that can better target cancer cells while sparing normal cells and tissues. Particularly, ZnO NPs exhibit a high degree of cancer cell selectivity and induce cell death, oxidative stress, interference with the cell cycle progression and genotoxicity in cancerous cells. In this scenario, effective cellular uptake of NP seems to be crucial, which is shown to be affected by cell cycle progression. In the present study, the cytotoxic potential of ZnO NPs and the effect of different cell cycle phases on the uptake of ZnO NPs were examined in A431 cells. It is shown that the ZnO NPs led to cell death and reactive oxygen species generation and were able to induce cell cycle arrest in S and G2/M phase with the higher uptake in G2/M phase compared with other phases.

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APA

Patel, P., Kansara, K., Senapati, V. A., Shanker, R., Dhawan, A., & Kumar, A. (2016). Cell cycle dependent cellular uptake of zinc oxide nanoparticles in human epidermal cells. Mutagenesis, 31(4), 481–490. https://doi.org/10.1093/mutage/gew014

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