Mechanisms of corona formation around nanomaterials remain enigmatic. Here, we provide evidence for spontaneous lipid corona formation that engenders new particle properties without the need for active mixing upon attachment to stationary and suspended lipid bilayer membranes. The mechanism of lipid corona formation can be used to improve control over nano-bio interactions and to help understand why some nanomaterial-ligand combinations are detrimental to organisms but others are not.
SUMMARYAlthough mixing nanoparticles with certain biological molecules can result in coronas that afford some control over how engineered nanomaterials interact with living systems, corona formation mechanisms remain enigmatic. Here, we report results from experiments and computer simulations that provide concrete lines of evidence for spontaneous lipid corona formation without active mixing upon attachment to stationary and suspended lipid bilayer membranes. Experiments show that polycation-wrapped particles disrupt the tails of zwitterionic lipids, increase bilayer fluidity, and leave the membrane with reduced z potentials. Computer simulations suggest that the contact ion pairing between the lipid head groups and the polycations' ammonium groups leads to the formation of stable, albeit fragmented, lipid bilayer coronas. The mechanistic insight regarding lipid corona formation can be used to improve control over nanobio interactions and to help understand why some nanomaterial-ligand combinations are detrimental to organisms but others are not.
Current high-throughput approaches evaluating toxicity of chemical agents toward bacteria typically rely on optical assays, such as luminescence and absorbance, to probe the viability of the bacteria. However, when applied to toxicity induced by nanomaterials, scattering and absorbance from the nanomaterials act as interferences that complicate quantitative analysis. Herein, we describe a bacterial viability assay that is free of optical interference from nanomaterials and can be performed in a high-throughput format on 96-well plates. In this assay, bacteria were exposed to various materials and then diluted by a large factor into fresh growth medium. The large dilution ensured minimal optical interference from the nanomaterial when reading optical density, and the residue left from the exposure mixture after dilution was confirmed not to impact the bacterial growth profile. The fractions of viable cells after exposure were allowed to grow in fresh medium to generate measurable growth curves. Bacterial viability was then quantitatively correlated to the delay of bacterial growth compared to a reference regarded as 100% viable cells; data analysis was inspired by that in quantitative polymerase chain reactions, where the delay in the amplification curve is correlated to the starting amount of the template nucleic acid. Fast and robust data analysis was achieved by developing computer algorithms carried out using R. This method was tested on four bacterial strains, including both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, showing great potential for application to all culturable bacterial strains. With the increasing diversity of engineered nanomaterials being considered for large-scale use, this high-throughput screening method will facilitate rapid screening of nanomaterial toxicity and thus inform the risk assessment of nanoparticles in a timely fashion.
Polyelectrolyte (PE) wrapping of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) is a standard method to control NP surface chemistry and charge. Because excess polyelectrolytes are usually employed in the surface modification process, it is critical to evaluate different purification strategies to obtain a clean final product and thus avoid ambiguities in the source of effects on biological systems. In this work, 4 nm diameter gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) were wrapped with 15 kDa poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH), and three purification strategies were applied: (a) diafiltration or either (b) one round or (c) two rounds of centrifugation. The bacterial toxicity of each of these three PAH-AuNP samples was evaluated for the bacterium Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 and is quantitatively correlated with the amount of unbound PAH molecules in the AuNP suspensions, as judged by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance experiments and quantification using fluorescent assay. Dialysis experiments show that, for a 15 kDa polyelectrolyte, a 50 kDa dialysis membrane is not sufficient to remove all PAH polymers. Together, these data showcase the importance of choosing a proper postsynthesis purification method for polyelectrolyte-wrapped NPs and reveal that apparent toxicity results may be due to unintended free wrapping agents such as polyelectrolytes.
The article describes the interactions between poly (oxonorbornenes) (PONs)-coated gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) with phospholipid vesicles and shows that the strength of these interactions strongly depends on the molecular structure of PONs, specifically their amine/alkyl side chain ratio. PONs, which are a recently introduced class of cationic polyelectrolytes, can be systematically varied to control the amine/alkyl ratio and to explore how the chemical character of cationic polyelectrolytes affects their interactions and the interactions of their nanoparticle conjugates with model membranes. Our study shows that increasing the amine/alkyl ratio by copolymerization of diamine and 1:1 amine/butyl oxonorbornene monomers impacts the availability of PONs amine/ammonium functional groups to interact with phospholipid membranes, the PONs surface coverage on AuNPs, and the membrane disruption activity of free PONs and PONs-AuNPs. The study makes use of transmission electron microscopy, UV-vis spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, thermogravimetric analysis, fluorescamine assay, ζ-potential measurements, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurements to characterize the PONs-AuNPs' size, size distribution, aggregation state, surface charge, and PONs surface coverage. The study also makes use of real-time fluorescence measurements of fluorescent liposomes before and during exposure to free PONs and PONs-AuNPs to determine the membrane disruption activity of free PONs and PONs-AuNPs. As commonly observed with cationic polyelectrolytes, both free PONs and PONs-AuNPs display significant membrane disruption activity. Under conditions where the amine/alkyl ratio in PONs maximizes PONs surface coverage, the membrane disruption activity of PONs-AuNPs is about 10-fold higher than the membrane disruption activity of the same free PONs. This is attributed to the increased local concentration of ammonium ions when PONs-AuNPs interact with the liposome membranes. In contrast, the hydrophobicity of amine-rich PONs, which are made for example from diamine oxonorbornene monomers, is significantly reduced. This leads to a significant reduction of PON surface coverage on AuNPs and in turn to a significant decrease in membrane disruption.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.