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IgG and fibrinogen driven nanoparticle aggregation

Author

  • Risto Cukalevski
  • Silvia A. Ferreira
  • Christopher Dunning
  • Tord Berggard
  • Tommy Cedervall

Summary, in English

A thorough understanding of how proteins induce nanoparticle (NP) aggregation is crucial when designing in vitro and in vivo assays and interpreting experimental results. This knowledge is also crucial when developing nano-applications and formulation for drug delivery systems. In this study, we found that extraction of immunoglobulin G (IgG) from cow serum results in lower polystyrene NPs aggregation. Moreover, addition of isolated IgG or fibrinogen to fetal cow serum enhanced this aggregation, thus demonstrating that these factors are major drivers of NP aggregation in serum. Counter-intuitively, NP aggregation was inversely dependent on protein concentration; i.e., low protein concentrations induced large aggregates, whereas high protein concentrations induced small aggregates. Protein-induced NP aggregation and aggregate size were monitored by absorbance at 400 nm and dynamic light scattering, respectively. Here, we propose a mechanism behind the protein concentration dependent aggregation; this mechanism involves the effects of multiple protein interactions on the NP surface, surface area limitations, aggregation kinetics, and the influence of other serum proteins.

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Pages

2733-2743

Publication/Series

Nano Reseach

Volume

8

Issue

8

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Keywords

  • immunoglobulin
  • aggregation
  • corona
  • protein
  • nanoparticles (NPs)

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1998-0124