Resumen:
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[EN] Pnictogen nanomaterials have recently attracted researchers' attention owing to their promising properties in the field of electronic, energy storage, and nanomedicine applications. Moreover, especially in the case ...[+]
[EN] Pnictogen nanomaterials have recently attracted researchers' attention owing to their promising properties in the field of electronic, energy storage, and nanomedicine applications. Moreover, especially in the case of heavy pnictogens, their chemistry allows for nanomaterial synthesis using both top-down and bottom-up approaches, yielding materials with remarkable differences in terms of morphology, size, yield, and properties. In this study, we carried out a comprehensive structural and spectroscopic characterization of antimony-based nanomaterials (Sb-nanomaterials) obtained by applying different production methodologies (bottom-up and top-down routes) and investigating the influence of the synthesis on their oxidation state and stability in a biological environment. Indeed, in situ XANES/EXAFS studies of Sb-nanomaterials incubated in cell culture media were carried out, unveiling a different oxidation behavior. Furthermore, we investigated the cytotoxic effects of Sb-nanomaterials on six different cell lines: two non-cancerous (FSK and HEK293) and four cancerous (HeLa, SKBR3, THP-1, and A549). The results reveal that hexagonal antimonene (Sb-H) synthesized using a colloidal approach oxidizes the most and faster in cell culture media compared to liquid phase exfoliated (LPE) antimonene, suffering acute degradation and anticipating well-differentiated toxicity from its peers. In addition, the study highlights the importance of the synthetic route for the Sb-nanomaterials as it was observed to influence the chemical evolution of Sb-H into toxic Sb oxide species, playing a critical role in its ability to rapidly eliminate tumor cells. These findings provide insights into the mechanisms underlying the dark cytotoxicity of Sb-H and other related Sb-nanomaterials, underlining the importance of developing therapies based on controlled and on-demand nanomaterial oxidation.; Study of three antimony-based nanomaterials' behaviour in biological conditions and the influence of the synthesis on their oxidation state and stability in this environment.
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Agradecimientos:
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This work has been supported by the Universitat de Valencia and Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria del Hospital La Fe de Valencia (VLC-BIOMED AP2022-27), the European Union (ERC-2018-StG 804110-2D-PnictoChem to G.A.), ...[+]
This work has been supported by the Universitat de Valencia and Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria del Hospital La Fe de Valencia (VLC-BIOMED AP2022-27), the European Union (ERC-2018-StG 804110-2D-PnictoChem to G.A.), the Spanish MICINN (PID2022-143297NB-I00, PDC2022-133997-I00, TED2021-131347B-I00, PID2021-122980OB-C51, TED and Excellence Unit Maria de Maeztu CEX2019-000919-M), the Generalitat Valenciana (CIDEGENT/2018/001) and Comunidad de Madrid "Materiales Avanzados MAD2D-CM (UCM3)". We also want to acknowledge ALBA Synchrotron for their collaboration in the project 2021095421 performed at BL22-CLAESS beamline. P. C.-E. acknowledges the PhD grant PRE2021-100943 funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by "ESF+". M. A. L. acknowledges the Generalitat Valenciana for a postdoctoral fellowship (CIAPOS/2021/255). M. M. is a research member from CONICET (Argentina) and thanks to the financial support of the institution, from the Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica (ANPCyT, PICT 2021-I-A-00903), and from Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Universidad Nacional de La Plata (UNLP, X-937).
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