Graphene microsheets enter cells through spontaneous membrane penetration at edge asperities and corner sites
- aSchool of Engineering, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912;
- bDepartment of Engineering Mechanics, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China;
- cDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912; and
- dInstitute for Molecular and Nanoscale Innovation, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912
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Edited* by L. B. Freund, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, Urbana, IL, and approved June 13, 2013 (received for review December 27, 2012)

Abstract
Understanding and controlling the interaction of graphene-based materials with cell membranes is key to the development of graphene-enabled biomedical technologies and to the management of graphene health and safety issues. Very little is known about the fundamental behavior of cell membranes exposed to ultrathin 2D synthetic materials. Here we investigate the interactions of graphene and few-layer graphene (FLG) microsheets with three cell types and with model lipid bilayers by combining coarse-grained molecular dynamics (MD), all-atom MD, analytical modeling, confocal fluorescence imaging, and electron microscopic imaging. The imaging experiments show edge-first uptake and complete internalization for a range of FLG samples of 0.5- to 10-μm lateral dimension. In contrast, the simulations show large energy barriers relative to kBT for membrane penetration by model graphene or FLG microsheets of similar size. More detailed simulations resolve this paradox by showing that entry is initiated at corners or asperities that are abundant along the irregular edges of fabricated graphene materials. Local piercing by these sharp protrusions initiates membrane propagation along the extended graphene edge and thus avoids the high energy barrier calculated in simple idealized MD simulations. We propose that this mechanism allows cellular uptake of even large multilayer sheets of micrometer-scale lateral dimension, which is consistent with our multimodal bioimaging results for primary human keratinocytes, human lung epithelial cells, and murine macrophages.
Footnotes
↵1Y.L., H.Y., and A.v.d.B. contributed equally to this work.
- ↵2To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: Huajian_Gao{at}brown.edu, robert_hurt{at}brown.edu, or Agnes_kane{at}brown.edu.
Author contributions: Y.L., H.Y., A.v.d.B., R.H.H., A.B.K., and H.G. designed research; Y.L., H.Y., and A.v.d.B. performed research; M.C. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; Y.L., H.Y., A.v.d.B., R.H.H., A.B.K., and H.G. analyzed data; and Y.L., H.Y., A.v.d.B., R.H.H., A.B.K., and H.G. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
↵*This Direct Submission article had a prearranged editor.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1222276110/-/DCSupplemental.














