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HOUSTON - Researchers at Rice University's Center
for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology (CBEN) have
demonstrated a simple way to reduce the toxicity of water-soluble
buckyballs by a factor of more than ten million.
The research will appear in an upcoming issue of
the journal Nano Letters, published by the American Chemical Society,
the world's largest scientific society. One of the first toxicological
studies of buckyballs, the research was published online by the
journal on Sept. 11.
Buckyballs, whose chemical notation is C60, are
hollow, soccerball-shaped molecules containing 60 carbon atoms. Their
diameter is just one-billionth of a meter, or one nanometer, and their
discovery at Rice in 1985 is widely regarded as an early milestone in
the field of nanotechnology.
While buckyballs show great promise in applications
as diverse as fuel cells, batteries, pharmaceuticals and coatings,
some scientists and activists have raised concerns about their
potential toxicity to humans and animals.
CBEN's study is the first cytotoxicity study of
human cells exposed to buckyballs. Cytotoxicity refers to toxic
effects on individual cells. The study found that even minor
alterations to the surface of the buckyballs can dramatically affect
how toxic they are to individual cells, and the researchers identified
specific alterations that render them much less toxic.
"There are many cases where toxicity is desirable,"
said Vicki Colvin, CBEN director, professor of chemistry and chemical
engineering, and the principal investigator for the research. "For
example, we might want particles that kill cancer cells or harmful
bacteria. In other cases -- like applications where particles may make
their way into the environment -- toxicity is undesirable."
In the study, the researchers exposed two types of
human cells to various solutions containing different concentrations
of buckyballs. Four types of solutions were tested. One contained tiny
clusters of smooth-surfaced buckyballs. In the other three, researcher
s modified the buckyballs by attaching other molecules to their sides.
Researchers measured how many cells died within 48 hours of exposure
to each solution, and they repeated the tests until they found the
exposure level for each that resulted in a 50 percent mortality rate.
In general, the greater the degree of surface
modification, the lower the toxicity. For example, the undecorated
buckyballs showed the highest toxicity -- about 20 parts per billion--
while the least toxic proved to be buckyballs decorated with the
largest number of hydroxyl side-groups. To achieve the equivalent
level of toxicity as that of bare buckyballs, the researchers had to
increase the concentration of these modified buckyballs by 10 million
times to more than 5 million parts per billion.
"We're encouraged to see that controlling the
surface properties of buckyballs allows us to dial the level of
toxicity up or down, because making those kinds of modifications is
something that chemists do every day in university research labs and
in industry," Colvin said. "Moreover, we believe the technique can
prove useful in tuning the toxicity of other nanoparticles."
The researchers postulate that cell death in the
tests occurred via physical disruption of the cell membrane by oxygen
radical species generated by the buckyballs.
Colvin and her colleagues emphasize that the study
only fills in part of the puzzle regarding fullerene toxicity. For
example, because cytotoxic studies look only at cells in culture, they
don't tell scientists what happens inside the body, where cellular
repair mechanisms, whole-organ and whole-body processes come into play.
"Cytotoxicity should not be confused with a
full-fledged toxicological risk assessment," said Kevin Ausman, CBEN
executive director and a co-author of the paper. "Risk assessments
take into account exposure rates, uptake mechanisms, transport within
the body and much more. Most often, cytotoxicity studies are used as
indicators of whether more extensive toxicological study is needed.
Based on our results we think buckyballs should be studied in more
detail, and we're already working to arrange additional studies." |