Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maribor Smetanova 17, SI- 2000 Maribor, Slovenia
2. IME Process Metallurgy and Metal Recycling RWTH Aachen University, Intzestras 1, 52056 Aachen, Germany
3. Institute of Medical Research, Military Medical Academy Crnotravska 17, 11002 Belgrade, Serbia
4. Medical Faculty, University of Niš, Blvd. Dr Zorana Đinđića 81 18000 Niš, Serbia
Abstract
The aim of this work was to study the cytotoxicity of different fractions of gold nanoparticles prepared by ultrasonic spray pyrolysis from gold scrap. The target cells were rat thymocytes, as a type of nonproliferating cells, and L929 mouse fibroblasts, as a type of continuous proliferating cells. Fractions 1 and 2, composed of pure gold nanoparticles, as determined by scanning electron microscopy with a combination of energy dispersive X-ray analysis, were nontoxic for thymocytes, but reduced moderately the proliferative activity of L929 cells. The inhibitory effect of fraction 2, containing particles smaller in size than fraction 1, was stronger. Fraction 3, composed of Au and up to 3% Cu was noncytotoxic for thymocytes, but was cytotoxic for L929 cells. Fraction 4, composed of Au and Ag nanoparticles, and fraction 5, composed of Au together with Cu, Ni, Zn, Fe, and In were cytotoxic for both thymocytes and L929 cells. These results suggest that USP enables the synthesis of pure gold nanoparticles with controlled size, even from gold scrap. However, microstructural analyses and biocompatibility testing are necessary for their proper selection from more cytotoxic gold nanoparticles, contaminated with other elements of gold alloys.
Subject
Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials
Cited by
27 articles.
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