Issue 12, 2015

Cell interaction with graphene microsheets: near-orthogonal cutting versus parallel attachment

Abstract

Recent experiments indicate that graphene microsheets can either undergo a near-orthogonal cutting or a parallel attachment mode of interaction with cell membranes. Here we perform a theoretical analysis to characterize the deformed membrane microstructure and investigate how these two interaction modes are influenced by the splay, tilt, compression, tension, bending and adhesion energies of the membrane. Our analysis indicates that, driven by the membrane splay and tension energies, a two-dimensional microsheet such as graphene would adopt a near-perpendicular configuration with respect to the membrane in the transmembrane penetration mode, whereas the membrane bending and tension energies would lead to parallel attachment in the absence of cross membrane penetration. These interaction modes may have broad implications in applications involving drug delivery, cell encapsulation and protection, and the measurement of the dynamic cell response.

Graphical abstract: Cell interaction with graphene microsheets: near-orthogonal cutting versus parallel attachment

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Oct 2014
Accepted
13 Feb 2015
First published
16 Feb 2015

Nanoscale, 2015,7, 5457-5467

Author version available

Cell interaction with graphene microsheets: near-orthogonal cutting versus parallel attachment

X. Yi and H. Gao, Nanoscale, 2015, 7, 5457 DOI: 10.1039/C4NR06170E

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