Introduction To Nanoscience Nanomaterial
Introduction To Nanoscience Nanomaterial
Introduction To Nanoscience Nanomaterial
Introduction to Nanoscience,
Nanomaterials, Nanocomposite,
Nanopolymer, and Engineering
Smart Materials
Yeşeren Saylan, Handan Yavuz, Celal Ülger, Adil Denizli, and Necdet Sağlam
Fig. 1.1 Some examples of nanomaterials: (a) Organic dyes, (b) green fluorescent protein, (c)
quantum dots, and (d) dyed polymer particles (Burns et al. 2006)
1.1.1 Nanomaterials
Nanotechnology has widely touched the lives of people, which is going to modify
most of the aspects and conduct the generation of new products and markets.
Nanotechnology is also the multidisciplinary science that makes it difficult to tie
down and predict the future effect in any specific area. Research in nanotechnology
has increased substantially over the years and all over the world (Bhat 2005).
Although nanotechnology seems to be mostly interested in material science,
chemistry, and physics, this discipline has spread to a wide range of life sciences
including information science, biotechnology, semiconductors and other technolo-
gies. These mutual interactions between science branches are positively affecting
many sectors such as space science, textile, ceramics, defense industry, electronics,
paper, plastic, renewable and sustainable energy, telecommunications, and automo-
tive (Porter and Youtie 2009).
1.2 Nano-approaches
Nano-based materials have unique physicochemical properties that can be used for
many applications in several industries including healthcare, food packaging, water puri-
fication, and electronics (Murty et al. 2013; Prasad et al. 2014, 2017a, b, c). According to
the latest literature, there are more than a thousand nanomaterial-based products manu-
factured by at least 500 companies from 20 different countries (Fiorino 2010).
1.2.1 Nanotubes
Nanotubes are one of the most significant nano-based materials with many physi-
cal, chemical, and mechanical features. They have several industrial applications
such as in medicine, textiles, water treatment, conductor and semiconductor tech-
nologies, biotechnology, solar cell, air purification, and mechanical engineering
(Hossain et al. 2014).
Giraldo and coworkers showed a single-walled carbon nanotube that transported
in passive and irreversibly localized within the lipid envelope of extracted plant
chloroplasts (Giraldo et al. 2014). Their single-walled carbon nanotubes encour-
aged over three times higher photosynthetic activity than controls and improved
maximum electron transport rates. They also assembled the single-walled carbon
nanotubes-chloroplast enable higher rates of leaf electron transport in vivo through
a mechanism consistent with augmented photo-absorption.
Valentini and coworkers created hybrid materials via delivering to unicellular
organisms the nutrient to flourish (Valentini et al. 2016). Their system depended on
a bionic composite, a combination of carbon nanotubes and Saccharomyces cerevi-
siae yeast extract. They performed tensile analysis on composite films to rationalize
a carbon nanotube cell bridging mechanism via the adhesion energy between the
matrix and carbon nanotubes. They observed that adding carbon nanotubes also
importantly improved the electrical conductivity and photoconductive activity.
Graphene nanoplatelets, carbon nanotubes, and a mixture of these nanomaterials
were spread out in silicone rubber with single-celled fungi, carried out by the same
research group (Valentini et al. 2017). They performed microorganisms’ fermenta-
tions while the gelling of the silicone matrix with collapsed cells that deduce as
made acceptable with an analytical model and excluded in an abiotic experimental
comparing. They also observed an increase in stretchability and damage resistance
with respect to the composites made by the abiotic process.
1.2.2 Nanoparticles
Nanoparticles have increasingly been investigated into other matrices. They are
intermediate structures between bulk materials and atomic structures. They can be
prepared by physical and chemical methods. Nanoparticles are reported to have
4 Y. Saylan et al.
different associated electronic, magnetic and optical properties and the most
reported methods being for metal nanoparticles while other substrates have also
been utilized (Weir et al. 2008; Saylan et al. 2017).
Pugazhenthiran et al. isolated Bacillus sp., silver resistant, because of the leakage
to a silver nitrate solution to the atmosphere (Pugazhenthiran et al. 2009). They first
synthesized silver nanoparticles using these airborne bacteria and then confirmed
with transmission electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray analyses.
According to their results, the size of the silver nanoparticles was measured as between
5 and 15 nm, and they were deposited in the periplasmic space of the bacterial cells.
Tilton’s research group produced poly-(ethylene oxide) brush-coated nanoparticles
with divinylbenzene cross-linked cores and poly-(ethylene oxide) brush shells that
have around 30 nm radius and prepared this nanomaterial that biodegraded only suitable
coating breakdown mechanism (Kirschling et al. 2011). They supplied poly-(ethylene
oxide)-degrading enrichment cultures with either poly-(ethylene oxide) homopolymer
or poly-(ethylene oxide) brush nanoparticles as the sole carbon source. They monitored
the production of protein and carbon dioxide as quantify of biological conversion.
Dankovich and Gray reported deactivating pathogenic bacteria method via infil-
tration through a sheet carrying silver nanoparticles (Dankovich and Gray 2011).
They characterized the silver nanoparticles and used bacteria inactivation while
infiltrating through the silver nanoparticle sheet, instead of bacteria removal from
the effluent by filtration. They tested the silver nanoparticles sheet for performance
with respect to bacteria inactivation and silver stripping as suspensions of bacteria
percolated through the sheet. The silver nanoparticles sheets showed antibacterial
properties with ppm levels.
1.2.3 Nanosensors
Fig. 1.2 Transmission electron microscopy images of Chlorella pyrenoidosa cells coated with
magnetic nanoparticles (a, b), a combined white light and fluorescence microscopy image of mag-
netically functionalized C. pyrenoidosa cells (c), a fluorescence microscopy image and a plot got
along the line of the control and propazine-treated magnetically functionalized C. pyrenoidosa
cells (d) (Zamaleeva et al. 2011)
6 Y. Saylan et al.
After American biologist James Watson and British physicist Francis Crick came up
with their famous model of the DNA double helix in the 1950s, many futures of this
precious genetic material have been discovered. Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are
a long molecule that contains genetic code and hold the information of proteins in
living organisms and viruses. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid is the primary mole-
cule for storing biological information. Like DNA, RNA or ribonucleic acid plays
an important role in storing information, regulation of gene expression, and bioca-
talysis. About last 40 years, nucleic acids found a new field of application in mate-
rial science. They can be designed and manipulated to produce a variety of different
nanostructures. Similar to proteins, RNA has a flexible structure and possesses cata-
lytic functions (Guo 2010). Compared with RNA and proteins, DNA molecules are
1 Introduction to Nanoscience, Nanomaterials, Nanocomposite, Nanopolymer… 7
less susceptible to hydrolysis and thus are highly stable. These attributes make DNA
a special biopolymer with highly predictable sequence-dependent properties, and
these properties have been exploited to construct DNA-based geometric and topo-
logic structures (Lu and Liu 2006). Seeman (2010) pioneered the concept 30 years
ago of using DNA as a material for creating nanostructures; this has led to an explo-
sion of knowledge in the now well-established field of DNA nanotechnology. RNA
also became attractive after using DNA in order to create nanostructures. The unique
properties in terms of free energy, folding, non-canonical base-pairing, base-
stacking, and in vivo transcription and processing that distinguish RNA from DNA
provide sufficient rationale to regard RNA nanotechnology as its own technological
discipline (Guo 2010; Guo et al. 2012). The synthetic nanostructures constructed to
date have provided, in addition to affording essential insights into RNA design,
important platforms to characterize and validate the structural self-folding and
assembly properties of RNA modules or building blocks. Furthermore, RNA
nanoparticles have shown great promise for applications in nanomedicine and
RNA-based therapeutics (Grabow and Jaeger 2014).
Nanotechnology is having an increasing impact on the healthcare industry, offer-
ing unprecedented capability of not only carrying multiple diagnostic/therapeutic
payloads in the same “package” but also facilitating the targeted delivery into spe-
cific sites and across complex biological barriers (Kang et al. 2005; Farokhzad and
Langer 2006; Pardridge 2008; Bonoiu et al. 2009). Gene therapy can be broadly
defined as the transfer of defined genetic material to specific target cells of a patient
for the ultimate purpose of preventing or altering a particular disease state. Vectors
are usually viral, but several non-viral techniques are being used as well. Genes and
DNA are now being introduced without the use of vectors, and various techniques
are being used to modify the function of genes in vivo without gene transfer (Jain
2008). Nanotechnology-based gene delivery is the division of nanomedicine con-
cerned with the synthesis, characterization, and functionalization of nanomaterials
to be used in targeted gene delivery applications. Nanomaterial-based gene delivery
systems hold great promise for curing fatal inherited and acquired diseases,
including neurological disorders, cancer, cardiovascular diseases, and acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). However, their use in clinical applications is
still controversial (Keles et al. 2016).
A variety of nanoparticles and other nanostructures can be used for non-viral
gene delivery. These include nanoliposomes, gelatin nanoparticles, calcium phos-
phate nanoparticles, dendrimers, and various composites. Biocompatible, inorganic
nanoparticles of carbonate apatite have the unique features essentially required for
smart delivery, as well as for the expression of genetic material in mammalian cells.
Apatite nanoparticles are promising candidates for non-viral gene delivery and are
superior to polymer- or lipid-based systems that are generally non-biodegradable
and inefficient (Jain 2008). Artificially synthesized non-bioactive materials are used
to deliver nucleic acid materials into cells, which have presented advantages such as
low toxicity, low immunoreactions, and the excellent ability to be chemically modi-
fied. Yet, these vectors show relatively low transfection efficiency (Sakaguchi et al.
2006; Zhang et al. 2010).
8 Y. Saylan et al.
Nanogene vector can combine and concentrate DNA and RNA, effectively intro-
ducing the combined or concentrated products into a variety of cells. Through the
interaction between phospholipid and glycoprotein with a negative charge on the
cations and cell membrane on its surface, nanogene vector enters the cytoplasm, and
a positive correlation between the number of cations and the transfer rate of genes
can be observed (Jackson et al. 2006). Nanogene vectors, as new drug and gene vec-
tors, present characteristics such as the controlled release, targeting, and the
improvement of bioavailability. The satisfying curative effect has been observed
from some animal model for tumor. However, most studies are in the stage of
in vitro and animal experiments, and in-depth research and human experiments are
needed so as to improve the diagnosis rate of tumor at an early stage as well as the
curative effect of target treatment (Sun et al. 2014).
Liposomes were the first nanoparticle (NP) platform. Since liposomes were first
described in 1965 as a model of cellular membranes, they have moved from a model
in biophysical research to one of the first NP to be applied for gene and drug deliv-
ery. In one study, NPs were used to selectively silence Cyclin D1, a cell cycle regu-
latory molecule, in leukocytes in vivo to determine the exact roles of the molecule
in gut inflammation (Peer et al. 2008). Another recent report also described the use
of lipid NPs for the in vivo delivery of siRNA to silence disease genes in immune
cells (Novobrantseva et al. 2012). NPs have also been used as a vehicle to deliver
siRNA in plant cells to study cellular pathways at the single-cell level (Silva et al.
2010). Bonoiu et al. (2009) introduced a nanotechnology approach that utilizes
gold nanorod-DARPP-32 siRNA complexes (nanoplexes) that target this dopami-
nergic signaling pathway in the brain. Gene silencing of the nanoplexes in dopami-
nergic neurons was evidenced by the reduction in the expression of key proteins
(DARPP-32, ERK, and PP-1) belonging to this pathway with no observed cytotox-
icity. This approach combines the therapeutic potential of gene silencing technol-
ogy with the imaging and site-specific delivery potential of nanotechnology using
gold nanorods.
DNA analysis is widely accepted techniques for personal identification. DNA
extraction and isolation from ancient bone samples, degraded body parts, etc. is
still quite difficult and challenging task for the forensic scientist. But upcom-
ing technology like nanotechnology will help for analysis of such samples for
DNA. In the context of bioseparation and purification, a probable solution is to
replace microparticle with nanoparticles as they have a high surface-to-volume
ratio. Magnetic nanoparticles have become an increasingly popular technique
for the separation of biomolecules, namely proteins, DNA, and RNA. They have
been successfully used to extract genomic DNA from body fluids, such as blood,
saliva, and semen (Boom et al. 1990). Ansari et al. (2018) reviewed different
nanoparticle applications, using magnetic microsphere by Gong and Li (2014)
and from cell culture using magnetic nanoparticles by Saiyed and coworkers
(Saiyed et al. 2008) and using salicylic acid-coated magnetic nanoparticles by
Zhou and coworkers (2013), from soil using silica-magnetic nanoparticles by
Sebastianelli and research group (Sebastianelli et al. 2008), from urine using
magnetic nanoparticles by Shan et al. (2012) and from saliva using magnetic
1 Introduction to Nanoscience, Nanomaterials, Nanocomposite, Nanopolymer… 9
1.5 Conclusion
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