Biocompatibility studies of macroscopic fibers made from carbon nanotubes: Implications for carbon nanotube macrostructures in biomedical applications

J. Stephen Yan, Marco Orecchioni, Flavia Vitale, Julia A. Coco, Guillaume Duret, Salvatore Antonucci, Sushma Sri Pamulapati, Lauren W. Taylor, Oliver S. Dewey, Moises Di Sante, Anna Maria Segura, Cansu Gurcan, Fabio Di Lisa, Acelya Yilmazer, Mark D. McCauley, Jacob T. Robinson, Mehdi Razavi, Klaus Ley, Lucia G. Delogu, Matteo Pasquali

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Macroscopic carbon nanotube fiber (CNTF) is a continuous monofilament microns-thick thread whose cross section consists of ten to hundreds of millions of tightly packed, aligned carbon nanotubes (CNTs). CNTF is flexible, strong, conductive, and has excellent electrochemical properties, making it an ideal candidate for bioelectronic interfaces. CNTF recent applications range from neuroelectronics and cardiac electrophysiology to biosensors. However, various reports on CNT toxicity have generated confusion on the biosafety of all CNT-based materials despite significant differences among individualized CNTs, unstructured CNT aggregates, and stable CNT macrostructures in compositions and morphologies. Here, the bio- and immune-compatibility profiles of CNTF are systematically evaluated at cellular, organ, and systemic levels. In vitro, CNTF shows good cytocompatibility with cell-lines like HEK-293, SH-SY5Y, as well as primary cardiomyocytes and macrophages. Ex vivo, CNTF shows no impact on blood parameters or functionality of key immune cells. In vivo, intraperitoneal injections of leachates from CNTF production reveal no evidence of toxicity suggesting no leachable or residual degradable byproducts. In addition, as the first multiscale toxicological evaluation of a CNT macrostructure, this report demonstrates that CNT macrostructures should be evaluated as their standalone class of carbon material, separately from individualized CNTs and unstructured CNT agglomerates.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)462-476
Number of pages15
JournalCarbon
Volume173
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Biocompatibility
  • Bioelectrics
  • Carbon nanotubes
  • Fibers
  • Immune cells

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Chemistry
  • General Materials Science

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