4.6 Article

The Morphology Dependent Interaction between Silver Nanoparticles and Bovine Serum Albumin

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16175821

Keywords

silver nanoparticle; morphology; bovine serum albumin; protein corona

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This study investigated the morphology-dependent interaction between silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) and proteins. The results showed that the particle size, shape, and dispersion of AgNPs significantly influenced the interaction with proteins. Protein coronas were formed on silver nanospheres and nanorods, leading to slightly enlarged outer sizes. In the presence of proteins, silver nanotriangles gradually transformed into nanodisks. These results indicate that the formation of a protein corona and the aggregation behaviors of AgNPs are markedly determined by their inherent morphologies.
Biological applications of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) depend on the covalently attached or adsorbed proteins. A series of biological effects of AgNPs within cells are determined by the size, shape, aspect ratio, surface charge, and modifiers. Herein, the morphology dependent interaction between AgNPs and protein was investigated. AgNPs with three different morphologies, such as silver nanospheres, silver nanorods, and silver nanotriangles, were employed to investigate the morphological effect on the interaction with a model protein: bovine serum albumin (BSA). The adsorptive interactions between BSA and the AgNPs were probed by UV-Vis spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering (DLS), Fourier transform infrared spectrometry (FTIR), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and circular dichroism (CD) techniques. The results revealed that the particle size, shape, and dispersion of the three types of AgNPs markedly influence the interaction with BSA. Silver nanospheres and nanorods were capsulated by protein coronas, which led to slightly enlarged outer size. The silver nanotriangles evolved gradually into nanodisks in the presence of BSA. Fluorescence spectroscopy confirmed the static quenching the fluorescence emission of BSA by the three AgNPs. The FTIR and CD results suggested that the AgNPs with different morphologies had different effects on the secondary structure of BSA. The silver nanospheres and silver nanorods induced more pronounced structural changes than silver nanotriangles. These results suggest that the formation of a protein corona and the aggregation behaviors of AgNPs are markedly determined by their inherent morphologies.

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