Abstract
Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) hold great promise in biomedical applications due to their unique properties and potential for specific tissue targeting. However, the clinical translation of nanoparticle-based therapeutics remains challenging, primarily due to an incomplete understanding of how nanoparticle properties influence interactions at the nano-bio interface, as well as the role of surface-adsorbed proteins (i.e. protein corona) in modulating nanoparticle-cell interactions.
This study demonstrates that surface charge has a greater influence than protein corona formation in determining the cytotoxicity, cellular uptake, and biodistribution of AgNPs. Using negatively and positively charged AgNPs, we show that while protein corona formation is essential for ensuring nanoparticle availability for cellular interactions, the adsorption of biomolecules is non-specific and independent of surface charge. Conversely, surface charge significantly influences the interactions of AgNPs with cells. Positively charged nanoparticles exhibit enhanced cellular uptake, preferential accumulation in lysosomes, and pronounced mitochondrial damage compared to their negatively charged counterparts, resulting in greater cytotoxic effects. This effect is particularly evident in human breast cancer cells, where negatively charged nanoparticles show minimal uptake and cytotoxicity. These findings demonstrate that surface charge is the primary factor governing nanoparticle-cell interactions, rather than protein corona formation. Nonetheless, the protein corona plays a critical role in stabilizing nanoparticles within physiological environments.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Fluorescence micrographs of cells treated with vehicle solution; TEM images of ultrathin sections of cells treated with vehicle solution; TEM images of ultrathin sections of cells treated for 24h with AgNPs; UV/Vis absorption spectra of AgNPs after incubation in medium; Profile of the SDS-PAGE lanes; UpSet plot of the intersection of absorbed proteins onto the surface of the AgNPs; Tables summarizing the proteins recovered from protein corona of AgNPs; Tables summarizing the proteins shared by the different protein corona.
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