We form coronas of serum proteins on gold nanorods (NRs) coated with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB). These coronas can be exploited for their ability to hold small molecular therapeutics at a capacity much higher (~5-10×) than what covalent conjugation strategies can achieve. Coronas are loaded with DNA oligonucleotides and Doxorubicin, showing that they can hold species of either negative or positive charge. Payload capacity varies with assembly strategy, ionic strength, and loading concentration. Payload release can be achieved by increasing the temperature or by ultrafast laser excitation of the NRs at their longitudinal surface plasmon resonance. DNA leakage from the corona is minimal within the first 3 days of preparation, although Dox leakage was more significant. The coronas also stabilize the NRs in buffer and biological media. This study demonstrates the biological utility of the protein corona around nanomaterials, contrasting the common view of the corona as an undesirable biological response.
The stability of gold nanorods (NRs) coated with amphiphilic ligands (ALs) was investigated. NRs coated with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) were ligand exchanged with polyoxyethylene [10] cetyl ether (Brij56), Oligofectamine (OF), and phosphatidylserine (PS). An aggregation index based on the longitudinal surface plasmon resonance peak broadening was used to measure stability of the NR-ALs under different conditions including the number of washes, pH, ionic concentration, and temperature. The aggregation index was also used to measure the stability of the NR-ALs under ultrafast laser irradiation and in the presence of proteins commonly used in cell culture. Differences in NR-AL stability were found, which were due to differences in the physical and chemical properties of the ALs. Apart from the charge on the AL headgroup, we suggest the Gibbs free energy of passivation (ΔG(p)) and enthalpy of passivation (ΔH(p)) of the AL could potentially aid in the selection of amphiphiles that can effectively passivate NRs for stability and optimize their properties and desired biological impact.
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