Ceric phosphates and nanocrystalline ceria: selective toxicity to melanoma cells

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Abstract

Nanocrystalline cerium dioxide is a promising inorganic UV filter for sunscreen applications due to its high UV absorbance and non-toxicity to normal cells. Nanoscale CeO2 also showed selective cytotoxicity to cancer cells, thus ceria-containing materials are now regarded for the creation of both preventive and therapeutic compositions. At the same time, the interaction of ceria nanoparticles with cell membranes and phosphate-rich components of sunscreen compositions arise the interest to biocompatibility of ceric phosphates. Crystalline cerium(IV) phosphates can be a promising alternative for nanoscale CeO2 due to their low solubility, high redox stability and UV protective property. However, to date, there is no information on their toxicity to cancer cells. In this work, using the MTT, Live/Dead and MMP assays, we demonstrated for the first time that the inhibitory impact of ceric phosphates Ce(PO4)(HPO4)0.5(H2O)0.5 and NH4Ce2(PO4)3 on murine melanoma B16/F10 cell line in vitro is comparable to that of nanoscale CeO2, at high (500–1000 µg/ml) concentrations.

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Kozlova, T. O., Popov, A. L., Romanov, M. V., Savintseva, I. V., Vasilyeva, D. N., Baranchikov, A. E., & Ivanov, V. K. (2023). Ceric phosphates and nanocrystalline ceria: selective toxicity to melanoma cells. Nanosystems: Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics, 14(2), 223–230. https://doi.org/10.17586/2220-8054-2023-14-2-223-230

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