1 research outputs found
Aromaticity/Bulkiness of Surface Ligands to Promote the Interaction of Anionic Amphiphilic Gold Nanoparticles with Lipid Bilayers
The presence of large hydrophobic
aromatic residues in cell-penetrating
peptides or proteins has been demonstrated to be advantageous for
their cell penetration. This phenomenon has also been observed when
AuNPs were modified with peptides containing aromatic amino acids.
However, it is still not clear how the presence of hydrophobic and
aromatic groups on the surface of anionic AuNPs affects their interaction
with lipid bilayers. Here, we studied the interaction of a range of
anionic amphiphilic AuNPs coated by different combinations of hydrophobic
and anionic ligands with four different types of synthetic lipid vesicles.
Our results demonstrated the important role of the surface aromatic
or bulky groups, relative to the hydrocarbon chains, in the interaction
of anionic AuNPs with lipid bilayers. Hydrophobic interaction itself
arising from the insertion of aromatic/bulky ligands on the surface
of AuNPs into lipid bilayers is sufficiently strong to cause overt
disruption of lipid vesicles and cell membranes. Moreover, by comparing
the results obtained from AuNPs coated with aromatic ligands and cyclohexyl
ligands lacking aromaticity respectively, we demonstrated that the
bulkiness of the terminal groups in hydrophobic ligands instead of
the aromatic character might be more important to the interaction
of AuNPs with lipid bilayers. Finally, we further correlated the observation
on model liposomes with that on cell membranes, demonstrating that
AuNPs that are more disruptive to the more negatively charged liposomes
are also substantially more disruptive to cell membranes. In addition,
our results revealed that certain cellular membrane domains that are
more susceptible to disruption caused by hydrophobic interactions
with nanoparticle surfaces might determine the threshold of AuNP-mediated
cytotoxicity