9 research outputs found
Perturbation of Hydrogen Bonding Networks over Supported Lipid Bilayers by Poly (Allylamine Hydrochloride)
Water is vital to many biochemical processes and is necessary for driving many fundamental interactions of cell membranes with their external environments, yet it is difficult to probe the membrane/water interface directly and without the use of external labels. Here, we employ vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy to understand the role of interfacial water molecules above bilayers formed from zwitterionic (phosphatidylcholine, PC) and anionic (phosphatidylglycerol, PG, and phosphatidylserine, PS) lipids as they are exposed to the common polycation poly (allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) in 100 mM NaCl. We show that as the concentration of PAH is increased, the interfacial water molecules are irreversibly displaced and find that it requires 10 times more PAH to displace interfacial water molecules from membranes formed from purely zwitterionic lipids when compared to membranes that contain the anionic PG and PS lipids. This outcome is likely due to difference in (1) the energy with which water molecules are bound to the lipid headgroups, (2) the number of water molecules bound to the headgroups, which is related to the headgroup area, and (3) the electrostatic interactions between the PAH molecules and the negatively charged lipids that are favored when compared to the zwitterionic lipid headgroups. The findings presented here contribute to establishing causal relationships in nanotoxicology and to understanding, controlling, and predicting the initial steps that lead to the lysis of cells exposed to membrane disrupting polycations, or to transfection.</div
Hydrogen Bond Networks Near Supported Lipid Bilayers from Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation Experiments and Atomistic Simulations
We report vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectra in which the C–H
stretches of lipid alkyl tails in fully hydrogenated single- and dual-component supported lipid
bilayers are detected along with the O–H stretching continuum above the bilayer. As the salt
concentration is increased from ~10 μM to 0.1 M, the SFG intensities in the O–H stretching
region decrease by a factor of 2, consistent with significant absorptive-dispersive mixing
between χ(2) and χ(3) contributions to the SFG signal generation process from charged interfaces.
A method for estimating the surface potential from the second-order spectral lineshapes (in the
OH stretching region) is presented and discussed in the context of choosing truly zero-potential
reference states. Aided by atomistic simulations, we find that the strength and orientation
distribution of the hydrogen bonds over the purely zwitterionic bilayers are largely invariant
between sub-micromolar and hundreds of millimolar concentrations. However, specific interactions between water molecules and lipid headgroups are observed upon replacing phosphocholine (PC) lipids with negatively charged phosphoglycerol (PG) lipids, which
coincides with SFG signal intensity reductions in the 3100 cm-1 to 3200 cm-1 frequency region.
The atomistic simulations show that this outcome is consistent with a small, albeit statistically
significant, decrease in the number of water molecules adjacent to both the lipid phosphate and
choline moieties per unit area, supporting the SFG observations. Ultimately, the ability to probe
hydrogen-bond networks over lipid bilayers holds the promise of opening paths for
understanding, controlling, and predicting specific and non-specific interactions between
membranes and ions, small molecules, peptides, polycations, proteins, and coated and uncoated
nanomaterials.</div
Hydrogen Bond Networks Near Supported Lipid Bilayers from Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation Experiments and Atomistic Simulations
<div>
<div>
<p>We report vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectra in which the C–H
stretches of lipid alkyl tails in fully hydrogenated single- and dual-component supported lipid
bilayers are detected along with the O–H stretching continuum above the bilayer. As the salt
concentration is increased from ~10 μM to 0.1 M, the SFG intensities in the O–H stretching
region decrease by a factor of 2, consistent with significant absorptive-dispersive mixing
between χ(2) and χ(3) contributions to the SFG signal generation process from charged interfaces.
A method for estimating the surface potential from the second-order spectral lineshapes (in the
OH stretching region) is presented and discussed in the context of choosing truly zero-potential
reference states. Aided by atomistic simulations, we find that the strength and orientation
distribution of the hydrogen bonds over the purely zwitterionic bilayers are largely invariant
between sub-micromolar and hundreds of millimolar concentrations. However, specific interactions between water molecules and lipid headgroups are observed upon replacing phosphocholine (PC) lipids with negatively charged phosphoglycerol (PG) lipids, which
coincides with SFG signal intensity reductions in the 3100 cm-1 to 3200 cm-1 frequency region.
The atomistic simulations show that this outcome is consistent with a small, albeit statistically
significant, decrease in the number of water molecules adjacent to both the lipid phosphate and
choline moieties per unit area, supporting the SFG observations. Ultimately, the ability to probe
hydrogen-bond networks over lipid bilayers holds the promise of opening paths for
understanding, controlling, and predicting specific and non-specific interactions between
membranes and ions, small molecules, peptides, polycations, proteins, and coated and uncoated
nanomaterials.<br></p></div></div
Lipid Corona Formation from Nanoparticle Interactions with Bilayers and Membrane-Specific Biological Outcomes
While mixing nanoparticles with certain
biological molecules can result in coronas that afford some control over how engineered
nanomaterials interact with living systems, corona formation mechanisms remain
enigmatic. Here, we report spontaneous lipid
corona formation, i.e. without active mixing, upon attachment to stationary lipid
bilayer model membranes and bacterial cell envelopes, and present ribosome-specific
outcomes for multi-cellular organisms. Experiments show that polycation-wrapped
particles disrupt the tails of zwitterionic lipids, increase bilayer fluidity, and
leave the membrane with reduced ζ-potentials. Computer simulations show contact
ion pairing between the lipid headgroups and the polycations’ ammonium groups leads
to the formation of stable, albeit fragmented, lipid bilayer coronas, while microscopy
shows fragmented bilayers around nanoparticles after interacting with Shewanella oneidensis. Our mechanistic insight
can be used to improve control over nano-bio interactions and to help understand
why some nanomaterial/ligand combinations are detrimental to organisms, like Daphnia magna, while others are not. </a
Direct Probes of 4 nm Diameter Gold Nanoparticles Interacting with Supported Lipid Bilayers
This work presents molecular-level
investigations of how well-characterized
silica-supported phospholipid bilayers formed from either pure DOPC
or a 9:1 mixture of DOPC:DOTAP interact with positively and negatively
charged 4 nm gold metal nanoparticles at pH 7.4 and NaCl concentrations
ranging from 0.001 to 0.1 M. Second harmonic generation (SHG) charge
screening measurements indicate the supported bilayers carry a negative
interfacial potential. Resonantly enhanced SHG measurements probing
electronic transitions within the gold core of the nanoparticles show
the particles interact irreversibly with the supported bilayers at
a range of concentrations. At 0.1 M NaCl, surface coverages for the
particles functionalized with the negatively charged ligand mercaptopropionic
acid (MPA) or wrapped in the cationic polyelectrolyte polyÂ(allylamine)
hydrochloride (PAH) are estimated from a joint analysis of QCM-D,
XPS, AFM, and ToF-SIMS to be roughly 1 × 10<sup>7</sup> and 1
× 10<sup>11</sup> particles cm<sup>–2</sup>, respectively.
Results from complementary SHG charge screening experiments point
to the possibility that the surface coverage of the MPA-coated particles
is more limited by interparticle Coulomb repulsion due to the charges
within their hydrodynamic volumes than with the PAH-wrapped particles.
Yet, SHG adsorption isotherms indicate that the interaction strength
per particle is independent of ionic strength and particle coating,
highlighting the importance of multivalent interactions. <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectra of the lipids within vesicles suspended in solution
show little change upon interaction with either particle type but
indicate loosening of the gold-bound PAH polymer wrapping upon attachment
to the vesicles. The thermodynamic, spectroscopic, and electrostatic
data presented here may serve to benchmark experimental and computational
studies of nanoparticle attachment processes at the nano–bio
interface
Lipid Corona Formation from Nanoparticle Interactions with Bilayers and Membrane-Specific Biological Outcomes
<a></a><a>While mixing nanoparticles with certain
biological molecules can result in coronas that afford some control over how engineered
nanomaterials interact with living systems, corona formation mechanisms remain
enigmatic. Here, we report spontaneous lipid
corona formation, i.e. without active mixing, upon attachment to stationary lipid
bilayer model membranes and bacterial cell envelopes, and present ribosome-specific
outcomes for multi-cellular organisms. Experiments show that polycation-wrapped
particles disrupt the tails of zwitterionic lipids, increase bilayer fluidity, and
leave the membrane with reduced ζ-potentials. Computer simulations show contact
ion pairing between the lipid headgroups and the polycations’ ammonium groups leads
to the formation of stable, albeit fragmented, lipid bilayer coronas, while microscopy
shows fragmented bilayers around nanoparticles after interacting with <i>Shewanella oneidensis</i>. Our mechanistic insight
can be used to improve control over nano-bio interactions and to help understand
why some nanomaterial/ligand combinations are detrimental to organisms, like <i>Daphnia magna</i>, while others are not. </a