4.8 Article

Ultrafast Structural Dynamics of the Photocleavage of Protein Hybrid Nanoparticles

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 3788-3794

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn200120e

Keywords

protein-nanoparticle hybrids; photo-cleavage; thermal denaturation; pulsed X-ray scattering; nanobubbles

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science, Education and the Arts Baden-Wurttemberg
  2. Creative Research Initiatives (Center for Time-Resolved Diffraction) of MEST/NRF
  3. WCU [R31-2008-000-10071-0]
  4. DFG

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Protein-coated gold nanoparticles in suspension are excited by intense laser pulses to mimic the light-induced effect on biomolecules that occur In photothermal laser therapy with nanoparticles as photosensitizer. Ultrafast X-ray scattering employed to access the nanoscale structural modifications of the protein-nanoparticle hybrid reveals that the protein shell Is expelled as a whole without denaturation at a laser fluence that coincides with the bubble formation threshold. In this ultrafast heating mediated by the nanoparticles, time-resolved scattering data show that proteins are not denatured in terms of secondary structure even at much higher temperatures than the static thermal denaturation temperature, probably because time Is too short for the proteins to unfold and the temperature stimulus has vanished before this motion sets in. Consequently the laser pulse length has a strong influence on whether the end result is the ligand detachment (for example drug delivery) or biomaterial degradation.

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