4.8 Article

Shape and Orientation Matter for the Cellular Uptake of Nonspherical Particles

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 687-693

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nl403949h

Keywords

Nanoparticle uptake; passive endocytosis; nanoparticle shape; nanoparticle size; continuum membrane model; wrapping energy

Funding

  1. EU FP7 NMP collaborative project PreNanoTox [309666]
  2. International Helmholtz Research School of Biophysics and Soft Matter (IHRS BioSoft)

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Recent advances in nanotechnology have made a whole zoo of particles of different shapes available for applications, but their interaction with biological cells and their toxicity is often not well understood. Experiments have shown that particle uptake by cells is determined by an intricate interplay between physicochemical particle properties like shape, size, and surface functionalization, but also by membrane properties and particle orientation. Our work provides systematic understanding, based on a mechanical description, for membrane wrapping of nanoparticles, viruses, and bacterial forms. For rod-like particles, we find stable endocytotic states with small and high wrapping fraction; an increased aspect ratio is unfavorable for complete wrapping. For high aspect ratios and round tips, the particles enter via a submarine mode, side-first with their long edge parallel to the membrane: For small aspect ratios and flat tips, the particles enter tip-first via a rocket mode.

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