| Literature DB >> 25506050 |
Ryan M Pearson1, Vanessa V Juettner1, Seungpyo Hong2.
Abstract
Achieving controlled cellular responses of nanoparticles (NP) is critical for the successful development and translation of NP-based drug delivery systems. However, precise control over the physicochemical and biological properties of NPs could become convoluted, diminished, or completely lost as a result of the adsorption of biomolecules to their surfaces. Characterization of the formation of the "biomolecular" corona has thus received increased attention due to its impact on NP and protein structure as well as its negative effect on NP-based targeted drug delivery. This review presents a concise survey of the recent literature concerning the importance of the NP-biomolecule corona and how it can be utilized to improve the in vivo efficacy of targeted delivery systems.Entities:
Keywords: biomolecular corona; in vivo efficacy; nanoparticle; targeted drug delivery
Year: 2014 PMID: 25506050 PMCID: PMC4245918 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2014.00108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1(A) Formation of the NP-biomolecule corona. Upon exposure to physiological fluids, NPs become coated with a variety of proteins and other biomolecules. The hard corona is comprised of lower abundance, high affinity biomolecules with almost negligible exchange rates. The soft corona is comprised of more abundant, lesser affinity biomolecules with faster exchange rates. (B) Size and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) grafting density determine PEG conformation and total serum protein adsorption to AuNPs. Reprinted with permission from Walkey et al. (2011). Copyright (2011) American Chemical Society. Negative effect of the biomolecular corona on the targeted interactions of silica NPs. (C) Schematic of blocked targeted cellular interactions of transferrin (Tf)-targeted NP in the presence of serum proteins. (D) Median A549 cell fluorescence intensity of Tf-targeted NPs in various concentrations of FBS. (C,D) Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: [Nature Nanotechnology] (Salvati et al., 2013), copyright 2013.
Considerations of the biomolecular corona to design more effective NPs.
| Size | Larger NPs adsorb more proteins to their surfaces | Shannahan et al., |
| Surface charge | Charged NPs adsorb more proteins to their surfaces. Alteration of particle zeta potential | Lundqvist et al., |
| Hydrophobicity | More hydrophobic NPs adsorb more proteins to their surfaces. | Cedervall et al., |
| High density brush PEG conformation adsorbed less protein than mushroom conformations | Walkey et al., | |
| Results in protein misfolding (changes in secondary structure) | Karlsson et al., | |
| Cryptic epitope exposure upon protein interaction with NP | Mortimer et al., | |
| Inappropriate receptor recognition after NP-protein interaction | Yan et al., | |
| Mirshafiee et al., | ||
| PEG backfilling may be used to overcome the negative effects of the protein corona on targeted drug delivery systems | Dai et al., | |
| Biomolecular corona formation can enhance pharmacokinetics of NPs | Peng et al., | |
| Biomolecular corona formation mitigates the toxicity of NPs | Ge et al., | |