High Amplification of the Antiviral Activity of Curcumin through Transformation into Carbon Quantum Dots

  • Chin Jung Lin
  • , Lung Chang
  • , Han Wei Chu
  • , Han Jia Lin
  • , Pei Ching Chang
  • , Robert Y.L. Wang*
  • , Binesh Unnikrishnan
  • , Ju Yi Mao
  • , Shiow Yi Chen
  • , Chih Ching Huang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

173 Scopus citations

Abstract

It is demonstrated that carbon quantum dots derived from curcumin (Cur-CQDs) through one-step dry heating are effective antiviral agents against enterovirus 71 (EV71). The surface properties of Cur-CQDs, as well as their antiviral activity, are highly dependent on the heating temperature during synthesis. The one-step heating of curcumin at 180 °C preserves many of the moieties of polymeric curcumin on the surfaces of the as-synthesized Cur-CQDs, resulting in superior antiviral characteristics. It is proposed that curcumin undergoes a series of structural changes through dehydration, polymerization, and carbonization to form core–shell CQDs whose surfaces remain a pyrolytic curcumin-like polymer, boosting the antiviral activity. The results reveal that curcumin possesses insignificant inhibitory activity against EV71 infection in RD cells [half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) >200 µg mL−1] but exhibits high cytotoxicity toward RD cells (half-maximal cytotoxic concentration (CC50) <13 µg mL−1). The EC50 (0.2 µg mL−1) and CC50 (452.2 µg mL−1) of Cur-CQDs are >1000-fold lower and >34-fold higher, respectively, than those of curcumin, demonstrating their far superior antiviral capabilities and high biocompatibility. In vivo, intraperitoneal administration of Cur-CQDs significantly decreases mortality and provides protection against virus-induced hind-limb paralysis in new-born mice challenged with a lethal dose of EV71.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1902641
JournalSmall
Volume15
Issue number41
DOIs
StatePublished - 01 10 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim

Keywords

  • antiviral agents
  • carbon quantum dots
  • curcumin
  • enterovirus 71
  • viral infection

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