Structural damage of chicken red blood cells exposed to platinum nanoparticles and cisplatin

Marta Kutwin, Ewa Sawosz, Sławomir Jaworski, Natalia Kurantowicz, Barbara Strojny, André Chwalibog

    18 Citations (Scopus)
    326 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Side effects and resistance of cancer cells to cisplatin are major drawbacks to its application, and recently, the possibility of replacing cisplatin with nanocompounds has been considered. Most chemotherapeutic agents are administered intravenously, and comparisons between the interactions of platinum nanoparticles (NP-Pt) and cisplatin with blood compartments are important for future applications. This study investigated structural damage, cell membrane deformation and haemolysis of chicken embryo red blood cells (RBC) after treatment with cisplatin and NP-Pt. Cisplatin (4 μg/ml) and NP-Pt (2,6 μg/ml), when incubated with chicken embryo RBC, were detrimental to cell structure and induced haemolysis. The level of haemolytic injury was increased after cisplatin and NP-Pt treatments compared to the control group. Treatment with cisplatin caused structural damage to cell membranes and the appearance of keratocytes, while NP-Pt caused cell membrane deformations (discoid shape of cells was lost) and the formation of knizocytes and echinocytes. This work demonstrated that NP-Pt have potential applications in anticancer therapy, but potential toxic side effects must be explored in future preclinical research.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number257
    JournalNanoscale Research Letters
    Volume9
    Number of pages6
    ISSN1931-7573
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2014

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