Abstract
Research paper on sunthesis of protein nanoparticles
Abstract
The desolvation
technique is one of the most popular methods for preparing protein
nanoparticles for medicine, biotechnology, and food applications. We fabricated
11 batches of BSA nanoparticles and 2 batches of gelatin nanoparticles by
desolvation method. BSA nanoparticles from 2 batches were cross-linked by
heating at +70 °C for 2 h; other nanoparticles were stabilized by
glutaraldehyde. We compared several analytical approaches to measuring their
concentration: gravimetric analysis, bicinchoninic acid assay, Bradford assay,
and alkaline hydrolysis combined with UV spectroscopy. We revealed that the
cross-linking degree and method of cross-linking affect both Bradford and BCA
assay. Direct measurement of protein concentration in the suspension of purified
nanoparticles by dye-binding assays can lead to significant (up to 50-60%)
underestimation of nanoparticle concentration. Quantification of non-desolvated
protein (indirect method) is affected by the presence of small nanoparticles in
supernatants and can be inaccurate when the yield of desolvation is low. The
reaction of cross-linker with protein changes UV absorbance of the latter.
Therefore pure protein solution is an inappropriate calibrator when applying UV
spectroscopy for the determination of nanoparticle concentration. Our
recommendation is to determine the concentration of protein nanoparticles by at
least two different methods, including gravimetric analysis.
Supplementary materials
Title
Article INTJPHARM 2020
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Title
SI Example calclations BCA assay
Description
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