4.6 Article

In vitro coronal protein signatures and biological impact of silver nanoparticles synthesized with different natural polymers as capping agents

Journal

NANOSCALE ADVANCES
Volume 3, Issue 15, Pages 4424-4439

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0na01013h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India
  2. School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, UNSW [BT/IACBGF/02/05/2014]
  3. Mark Wainwright Analytical Centre, UNSW

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Biopolymer-capped nanosilver particles were synthesized to study their haemocompatibility in vitro and in vivo. Different biopolymer-capped particles showed varying levels of aggregation and stability in biologically relevant media. In vitro cytotoxicity studies revealed size and concentration-dependent haemolytic activity, while in vivo studies showed minimal haemolysis effects and accumulation of particles in organs.
Biopolymer-capped particles, sodium alginate-, gelatin- and reconstituted silk fibroin-capped nanosilver (AgNPs), were synthesized with an intention to study, simultaneously, their in vitro and in vivo haemocompatibility, one of the major safety factors in biomedical applications. Solid state characterization showed formation of spherical nanoparticles with 5 to 30 nm primary sizes (transmission electron microscopy) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis of particles confirmed silver bonding with the biopolymer moieties. The degree of aggregation of the biopolymer-capped AgNPs in the synthesis medium (ultrapure water) is relatively low, with comparable hydrodynamic size with those of the control citrate-stabilized NPs, and remained relatively unchanged even after 6 weeks. The polymer-capped nanoparticles showed different degrees of aggregation in biologically relevant media - PBS (pH 7.4) and 2% human blood plasma - with citrate- (control) and alginate-capped particles showing the highest aggregation, while gelatin- and silk fibroin-capped particles revealed better stability and less aggregation in these media. In vitro cytotoxicity studies revealed that the polymer-capped particles exhibited both concentration and (hydrodynamic) size-dependent haemolytic activity, the extent of which was higher (up to 100% in some cases) in collected whole blood samples of healthy human volunteers when compared to that in the washed erythrocytes. This difference is thought to result from the detected protein corona formation on the nanoparticle surface in the whole blood system, which was associated with reduced particle aggregation, causing more severe cytotoxic effects. At the tested particle concentration range in vitro, we observed a negligible haemolysis effect in vivo (Balb/c mice). Polymer-capped particles did accumulate in organs, with the highest levels detected in the liver (up to 422 mu g per g tissue), yet no adverse behavioural effects were observed in the mice during the duration of the nanoparticle exposure.

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