posted on 2015-03-10, 00:00authored byShanghao Li, Lingyu Wang, Charles
C. Chusuei, Valentina M. Suarez, Patrica L. Blackwelder, Miodrag Micic, Jhony Orbulescu, Roger M. Leblanc
One prevention and therapeutic strategy
for diseases associated
with peptide or protein fibrillation is to inhibit or delay the fibrillation
process. Carbon dots (C–Dots) have recently emerged as benign
nanoparticles to replace toxic quantum dots and have attracted great
attention because of their unique optical properties and potential
applications in biological systems. However, the effect of C-Dots
on peptide or protein fibrillation has not been explored. In this
in vitro study, human insulin was selected as a model to investigate
the effect of C-Dots on insulin fibrillation. Water-soluble fluorescent
C-Dots with sizes less than 6 nm were prepared from carbon powder
and characterized by UV–vis spectroscopy, fluorescence, Fourier
transform infrared spectrophotometry, X-ray photoelectron spectrometry,
transmission electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. These
C-Dots were able to efficiently inhibit insulin fibrillation in a
concentration-dependent manner. The inhibiting effect of C-Dots was
even observed at 0.2 μg/mL. Importantly, 40 μg/mL of C-Dots
prevent 0.2 mg/mL of human insulin from fibrillation for 5 days under
65 °C, whereas insulin denatures in 3 h under the same conditions
without C-Dots. The inhibiting effect is likely due to the interaction
between C-Dots and insulin species before elongation. Cytotoxicity
study shows that these C-Dots have very low cytotoxicity. Therefore,
these C-Dots have the potential to inhibit insulin fibrillation in
biological systems and in the pharmaceutical industry for the processing
and formulation of insulin.