| Literature DB >> 28196309 |
Alyssa B Chinen1,2, Chenxia M Guan1,3, Caroline H Ko1,2, Chad A Mirkin1,2,3.
Abstract
The effect of serum protein adsorption on the biological fate of Spherical Nucleic Acids (SNAs) is investigated. Through a proteomic analysis, it is shown that G-quadruplexes templated on the surface of a gold nanoparticle in the form of SNAs mediate the formation of a protein corona that is rich in complement proteins relative to SNAs composed of poly-thymine (poly-T) DNA. Cellular uptake studies show that complement receptors on macrophage cells recognize the SNA protein corona, facilitating their internalization, and causing G-rich SNAs to accumulate in the liver and spleen more than poly-T SNAs in vivo. These results support the conclusion that nucleic acid sequence and architecture can mediate nanoparticle-biomolecule interactions and alter their cellular uptake and biodistribution properties and illustrate that nucleic acid sequence is an important parameter in the design of SNA therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: G-quadruplexes; Spherical Nucleic Acids; nanoparticle biodistribution; oligonucleotides; protein corona
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28196309 PMCID: PMC5493144 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201603847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281