| Literature DB >> 31351245 |
Manon Debayle1, Elie Balloul2, Fatimata Dembele1, Xiangzhen Xu1, Mohamed Hanafi3, Francois Ribot4, Cornelia Monzel5, Mathieu Coppey2, Alexandra Fragola1, Maxime Dahan2, Thomas Pons6, Nicolas Lequeux7.
Abstract
In the last few years, zwitterionic polymers have been developed as antifouling surface coatings. However, their ability to completely suppress protein adsorption at the surface of nanoparticles in complex biological media remains undemonstrated. Here we investigate the formation of hard (irreversible) and soft (reversible) protein corona around model nanoparticles (NPs) coated with sulfobetaine (SB), phosphorylcholine (PC) and carboxybetaine (CB) polymer ligands in model albumin solutions and in whole serum. We show for the first time a complete absence of protein corona around SB-coated NPs, while PC- and CB-coated NPs undergo reversible adsorption or partial aggregation. These dramatic differences cannot be described by naïve hard/soft acid/base electrostatic interactions. Single NP tracking in the cytoplasm of live cells corroborate these in vitro observations. Finally, while modification of SB polymers with additional charged groups lead to consequent protein adsorption, addition of small neutral targeting moieties preserves antifouling and enable efficient intracellular targeting.Entities:
Keywords: Nanoparticle; Protein corona; Zwitterion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31351245 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.119357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479