| Literature DB >> 27995125 |
Nariman Yousefi1, Nathalie Tufenkji1.
Abstract
There is increasing interest in using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) to investigate the interaction of nanoparticles (NPs) with model surfaces. The high sensitivity, ease of use and the ability to monitor interactions in real-time has made it a popular technique for colloid chemists, biologists, bioengineers, and biophysicists. QCM-D has been recently used to probe the interaction of NPs with supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) as model cell membranes. The interaction of NPs with SLBs is highly influenced by the quality of the lipid bilayers. Unlike many surface sensitive techniques, by using QCM-D, the quality of SLBs can be assessed in real-time, hence QCM-D studies on SLB-NP interactions are less prone to the artifacts arising from bilayers that are not well formed. The ease of use and commercial availability of a wide range of sensor surfaces also have made QCM-D a versatile tool for studying NP interactions with lipid bilayers. In this review, we summarize the state-of-the-art on QCM-D based techniques for probing the interactions of NPs with lipid bilayers.Entities:
Keywords: QCM-D; cell membrane; lipid bilayer; nanoparticles; quartz crystal microbalance
Year: 2016 PMID: 27995125 PMCID: PMC5136538 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2016.00046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1(A) Deposition of mass onto a quartz crystal sensor results in changes in its oscillation frequency and dissipation, (B) measured QCM-D frequency and dissipation shifts during formation of an SVL and an SLB; Adapted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Protocols (Cho et al., 2010), copyright (2010), (C) confocal laser scanning microscope image of a lipid raft formed on a QCM-D silica crystal (scale bars represent 2 μm); Adapted from Melby et al. (2016) - Published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, (D) pore formation on an SLB by hydrophobic polystyrene NPs (scale bars represent 20 μm); Reprinted with permission from Jing et al. (2014). Copyright (2014) American Chemical Society, (E) deposition of positively charged polystyrene NPs on negatively charged SLBs results in a kinetic process of bilayer disruption; Reprinted with permission from Yousefi et al. (2016). Copyright (2016) American Chemical Society, and (F) a weaker interfacial interaction between SLBs and their underlying substrates results in faster disruption of bilayers by polystyrene NPs; Reprinted with permission from Yousefi et al. (2016). Copyright (2016) American Chemical Society.
Summary of the literature on probing NP interactions with SLBs using QCM-D.
| Gold | 2, 4, 10, 40 | α-PC | Natural organic matter | Bailey et al., |
| Polyamidoamine | 200 | POPC:POPS | Drug release | Frost et al., |
| GO | – | POPC:POEPC | Interaction mechanism | Frost et al., |
| Gold | 4 | DOPC+LPS | NP interaction with LPS | Jacobson et al., |
| Polystyrene latex | 28, 62, 140 | α-PC | Hydrophobicity and size | Jing and Zhu, |
| Polystyrene latex | 130 | α-PC | Ionic type and strength | Jing et al., |
| Cu, CuO, Cu-Zn | 20–200 | POPC:POPS | Interaction mechanism | Karlsson et al., |
| Cu, CuO, Cu-Zn | 20–200 | POPC:POPG | Interaction mechanism | Karlsson et al., |
| Polystyrene latex | 40, 100 | POPC | Hard NP corona | Lesniak et al., |
| Silica | 50 | POPC | Hard NP corona | Lesniak et al., |
| GO | – | DOPC | Ionic type and strength | Liu and Chen, |
| Silica | 36 | DOPC | Ionic type and strength | Liu and Chen, |
| Ceria | 39 | DOPC | Ionic type and strength | Liu and Chen, |
| Alumina | 38 | DOPC | Ionic type and strength | Liu and Chen, |
| Gold | 4 | DOPC+Chol.+SM | Lipid raft | Melby et al., |
| Gold | 4 | DOPC | Interaction mechanism | Troiano et al., |
| Gold | 4 | DOPC:DOTAP | Interaction mechanism | Troiano et al., |
| Silver | 49–65 | DOPC | Soft NP corona | Wang et al., |
| MWCNTs | – | DOPC | Ionic type and strength | Yi and Chen, |
| CdSe | – | DOPC | pH and ionic strength | Zhang and Yang, |
| CdSe | – | DOPC:DOTAP | pH and ionic strength | Zhang and Yang, |
| Airborne particles | <2.5 μm | DOPC, DOPG | Simulated lung fluid | Zhou et al., |
| Polystyrene latex | 20 | POPE:POPG | Interfacial interactions | Yousefi et al., |