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Review
. 2024 May;21(5):751-766.
doi: 10.1080/17425247.2024.2364652. Epub 2024 Jun 10.

Graphene-based materials as nanoplatforms for antiviral therapy and prophylaxis

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Review

Graphene-based materials as nanoplatforms for antiviral therapy and prophylaxis

Daniela Iannazzo et al. Expert Opin Drug Deliv. 2024 May.

Abstract

Introduction: The dramatic effects caused by viral diseases have prompted the search for effective therapeutic and preventive agents. In this context, 2D graphene-based nanomaterials (GBNs) have shown great potential for antiviral therapy, enabling the functionalization and/or decoration with biomolecules, metals and polymers, able to improve their interaction with viral nanoparticles.

Areas covered: This review summarizes the most recent advances of the antiviral research related to 2D GBNs, based on their antiviral mechanism of action. Their ability to inactivate viruses by inhibiting the entry inside cells, or through drug/gene delivery, or by stimulating the host immune response are here discussed. As reported, biological studies performed in vitro and/or in vivo allowed to demonstrate the antiviral activity of the developed GBNs, at different stages of the virus life cycle and the evaluation of their long-term toxicity. Other mechanisms closely related to the physicochemical properties of GBNs are also reported, demonstrating the potential of these materials for antiviral prophylaxis.

Expert opinion: GBNs represent valuable tools to fight emerging or reemerging viral infections. However, their translation into the clinic requires standardized scale-up procedures leading to the reliable and reproducible synthesis of these nanomaterials with suitable physicochemical properties, as well as more in-depth pharmacological and toxicological investigations. We believe that multidisciplinary approaches will give valuable solutions to overcome the encountered limitations in the application of GBNs in biomedical and clinical field.

Keywords: Graphene-based materials; antiviral agents; drug delivery systems; electrostatic inactivation; immunotherapeutics; photodegradation; protective coatings; virus entry inhibitors.

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