| Literature DB >> 33883044 |
Lucía Abarca-Cabrera1, Paula Fraga-García2, Sonja Berensmeier1.
Abstract
The major interest in nanoparticles as an application platform for biotechnology arises from their high surface-to-volume ratio. Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) are particularly appealing due to their superparamagnetic behavior, which enables bioseparation using external magnetic fields. In order to design advanced biomaterials, improve binding capacities and develop innovative processing solutions, a thorough understanding of the factors governing organic-inorganic binding in solution is critical but has not yet been achieved, given the wide variety of chemical and physical influences. This paper offers a critical review of experimental studies of the interactions between low cost IONPs (bare iron oxides, silica-coated or easily-functionalized surfaces) and the main groups of biomolecules: proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and carbohydrates. Special attention is devoted to the driving forces and interdependencies responsible of interactions at the solid-liquid interface, to the unique structural characteristics of each biomolecular class, and to environmental conditions influencing adsorption. Furthermore, studies focusing on mixtures, which are still rare, but absolutely necessary to understand the biocorona, are also included. This review concludes with a discussion of future work needed to fill the gaps in knowledge of bio-nano interactions, seeking to improve nanoparticles' targeting capabilities in complex systems, and to open the door for multipurpose recognition and bioseparation processes.Entities:
Keywords: Adsorption; Bio-nano interface; Biocorona; Biomolecules; Bionanotechnology; Bioseparation; Interaction mechanism; Iron oxide nanoparticles
Year: 2021 PMID: 33883044 PMCID: PMC8059211 DOI: 10.1186/s40824-021-00212-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Res ISSN: 1226-4601
Fig. 1Frontiers constructing the bio-nano interface, which is constituted by the nanoparticle surface, the biomolecule and the medium. The characteristics of each element reshape the mechanism of interaction
Fig. 2Manifold adsorption mechanisms. a Amino acids and peptides, building blocks forming proteins, are bound to the IONPs surface mainly by the carboxylic group using three different mechanisms: ionic, monodentate and bidentate coordination [61, 77, 78]. b Carbohydrates attach to the surface via the hydroxyl, amino and carboxylic groups [79]. c DNA interacts with IONPs through the phosphate group [15, 49]. d Fatty acids use the carboxylic group to join to the nanoparticle [80], while phospholipids use the phosphate group (head) or the hydrophobic chain (tail) depending on the hydrophobicity of the surface [81]. Both form bilayers around the surface
Mechanisms of interaction reported for biomolecules onto iron oxide nanoparticles
| Target biomolecule | Nanoparticle type and size | Interaction mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transferrin | Bare/PVA coated IONPs (5–10 nm) | By affinity using iron binding sites | [ |
| Lysine | IONPs (9.7 ± 1.5 nm and 14 nm) | Through the carboxylic group and molecular associates at high concentrations | [ |
| Aspartic acid | IONPs (9.7 ± 1.5 nm) | Both carboxyl groups attached to the surface, through the side carboxyl group and associates. | [ |
| Glycine | IONPs (14 nm) | Via carboxyl group in ionic or bidentate coordination | [ |
| Glutamic acid | IONPs (14 nm) | Bridging mechanism by the α- or the side chain carboxyl group | |
| Serine | IONPs (14 nm) | Formation of ionic or bidentate bridging complexes | |
L-arginine, L-lysine L-glutamine and glycine | IONPs (NA) | Electrostatic interactions | [ |
| Homo-peptides | IONPs (14 nm) | Electrostatic interactions | [ |
| Plasma proteins | Azaleic acid coated IONPs (10 nm) | Hydrophobic interactions | [ |
| Glu8 peptides | BION (5–20 nm) | Carboxylate groups | [ |
| Sodium oleate | IONPs (10 nm) | Bidentate coordination: carboxylate group of sodium oleate and hydroxyl groups of the IONP surface. | [ |
| Ionic interaction of carboxylic groups on the secondary layer | |||
| Oleic acid, palmitic acid, stearic acid, and linoleic acid | IONPs (8 nm) | Covalent binding | [ |
| Multilipids, including DSPE-mPEG and DSPE-PEG-PDP | Oleic acid coated IONPs | Hydrophobic interactions between the oleic acid tails and DSPEPEG tails (lipid stitching) | [ |
| (10–30 nm) | |||
| DOTAP | IONPs | Hydrophobic, van der Waals and magnetic dipolar force forming a bilayer | [ |
| (11 ± 1.3 nm) | |||
| DNA | IONPs (15.3 nm) | Hydrogen bonds | [ |
| ODN | TRIS coated IONPs (2.6 nm) | Electrostatic interactions: hydroxylic groups and phosphate | [ |
| pDNA | Silica coated IONPs (9.8 nm) | Electrostatic interactions: hydroxylic groups and phosphate | [ |
| DNA | IONPs | Electrostatic interactions with phosphate | [ |
| Salmon DNA | Silica coated IONPs (70 nm) | Electrostatic interactions | [ |
| DNA | Amino functionalized silica coated IONPs (25 nm) | Electrostatic interactions | [ |
| (amino groups and phosphate backbone) | |||
| Chitosan | IONPs (11 nm) | Electrostatic interactions | [ |
| Alginate | |||
| Polysaccharides | IONPs (8.41 ± 0.94 nm) | NA | [ |
Fig. 3Illustration of biocorona formation. These molecules, however, are not all at the same scale, so they are not proportional. Proteins (represented in green), lipids (yellow), carbohydrates (blue), DNA (red), small molecules (grey) and ions form the biocorona in a biological milieu, where different phenomena can co-occur: (i) biomolecule-surface interactions, (ii) biomolecule-biomolecule interactions, for the formation of a mono-, bi- or multi-layer, and (iii) nanoparticle-nanoparticle interactions