4.8 Article

Size-Dependent Effects of Nanoparticles on Enzymes in the Blood Coagulation Cascade

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 4736-4744

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nl501863u

Keywords

Protein-nanoparticle; interaction; activity; kinetics; blood coagulation; nanosafety

Funding

  1. Lawski Foundation
  2. Nanometer Structure Consortium at Lund University
  3. Swedish Research Foundation [70413]

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Nanoparticles (NPs) are increasingly used in diagnostic and drug delivery. After entering the bloodstream, a protein corona will form around NPs. The size and curvature of NPs is one of the major characteristics affecting the composition of bound protein in the corona. Key initiators of the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, the contact activation complex, (Kallikrein, Factor XII, and high molecular weight Kininogen) have previously been identified on NPs surfaces. We show that the functional impact of carboxyl-modified polystyrene NPs on these initiators of the intrinsic pathway is size dependent. NPs with high curvature affect the enzymatic activity differently from NPs with low curvature. The size dependency is evident in full blood plasma as well as in solutions of single coagulation factors. NPs induce significant alteration of the enzymatic activity in a size-dependent manner, and enzyme kinetics studies show a critical role for NPs surface area and curvature.

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