Nanoparticle size and surface properties determine the protein corona with possible implications for biological impacts
University College Dublin · Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Molecular Interactions
Abstract
Nanoparticles in a biological fluid (plasma, or otherwise) associate with a range of biopolymers, especially proteins, organized into the "protein corona" that is associated with the nanoparticle and continuously exchanging with the proteins in the environment. Methodologies to determine the corona and to understand its dependence on nanomaterial properties are likely to become important in bionanoscience. Here, we study the long-lived ("hard") protein corona formed from human plasma for a range of nanoparticles that differ in surface properties and size. Six different polystyrene nanoparticles were studied: three different surface chemistries (plain PS, carboxyl-modified, and amine-modified) and two sizes of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 65.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
6- MLMartin LundqvistCorresponding
University College Dublin, Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Molecular Interactions
- JSJohannes Stigler
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Molecular Interactions
- GEGiuliano Elia
University College Dublin
- ILIseult Lynch
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Molecular Interactions
- TCTommy Cedervall
Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Molecular Interactions
Topics & keywords
- Nanoparticle
- Nanomaterials
- Nanotechnology
- Corona (planetary geology)
- Surface modification
- Materials science
- Chemistry
- Biophysics