Rupture
of Lipid Membranes Induced by Amphiphilic
Janus Nanoparticles
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
The
surface coatings of nanoparticles determine their interaction
with biomembranes, but studies have been limited almost exclusively
to nanoparticles with a uniform surface chemistry. Although nanoparticles
are increasingly made with complex surface chemistries to achieve
multifunctionalities, our understanding of how a heterogeneous surface
coating affects particle–biomembrane interaction has been lagging
far behind. Here we report an investigation of this question in an
experimental system consisting of amphiphilic “two-faced”
Janus nanoparticles and supported lipid membranes. We show that amphiphilic
Janus nanoparticles at picomolar concentrations induce defects in
zwitterionic lipid bilayers. In addition to revealing the various
effects of hydrophobicity and charge in particle–bilayer interactions,
we demonstrate that the Janus geometrythe spatial segregation
of hydrophobicity and charges on particle surfacecauses nanoparticles
to bind more strongly to bilayers and induce defects more effectively
than particles with uniformly mixed surface functionalities. We combine
experiments with computational simulation to further elucidate how
amphiphilic Janus nanoparticles extract lipids to rupture intact lipid
bilayers. This study provides direct evidence that the spatial arrangement
of surface functionalities on a nanoparticle, rather than just its
overall surface chemistry, plays a crucial role in determining how
it interacts with biological membranes