| Literature DB >> 18217783 |
Pascale R Leroueil1, Stephanie A Berry, Kristen Duthie, Gang Han, Vincent M Rotello, Daniel Q McNerny, James R Baker, Bradford G Orr, Mark M Banaszak Holl.
Abstract
Nanoparticles with widely varying physical properties and origins (spherical versus irregular, synthetic versus biological, organic versus inorganic, flexible versus rigid, small versus large) have been previously noted to translocate across the cell plasma membrane. We have employed atomic force microscopy to determine if the physical disruption of lipid membranes, formation of holes and/or thinned regions, is a common mechanism of interaction between these nanoparticles and lipids. It was found that a wide variety of nanoparticles, including a cell penetrating peptide (MSI-78), a protein (TAT), polycationic polymers (PAMAM dendrimers, pentanol-core PAMAM dendrons, polyethyleneimine, and diethylaminoethyl-dextran), and two inorganic particles (Au-NH2, SiO2-NH2), can induce disruption, including the formation of holes, membrane thinning, and/or membrane erosion, in supported lipid bilayers.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18217783 DOI: 10.1021/nl0722929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189