4.8 Article

Slight temperature changes affect protein affinity and cellular uptake/toxicity of nanoparticles

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 5, Issue 8, Pages 3240-3244

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3nr32551b

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It is known that what the cell actually sees at the nanoscale is an outer shell formed of 'protein corona' on the surface of nanoparticles (NPs). The amount and composition of various proteins on the corona are strongly dependent on the biophysicochemical properties of NPs, which have been extensively studied. However, the effect of a small variation in temperature, due to the human circadian rhythm, on the composition of the protein corona and the affinity of various proteins to the surface of NPs, was ignored. Here, the effect of temperature on the composition of protein corona and the affinity of various proteins to the surface of NPs and, subsequently, cell responses to the protein coated NPs are probed. The results confirmed that cellular entrance, dispersion, and toxicity of NPs are strongly diverse with slight body temperature changes. This new finding can help scientists to maximise NP entrance to specific cells/organs with lower toxicity by adjusting the cellular/organ temperature.

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