Litcius/Paper detail

Long‐Term Stability, Biocompatibility, and Magnetization of Suspensions of Isolated Bacterial Magnetosomes

Frank Mickoleit, Cornelia Jörke, R. Richter, Sabine Rosenfeldt, Simon Markert, Ingo Rehberg, Anna S. Schenk, Oliver Bäumchen, Dirk Schüler, Joachim H. Clement

2023Small13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Magnetosomes are magnetic nanoparticles biosynthesized by magnetotactic bacteria. Due to a genetically strictly controlled biomineralization process, the ensuing magnetosomes have been envisioned as agents for biomedical and clinical applications. In the present work, different stability parameters of magnetosomes isolated from Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense upon storage in suspension (HEPES buffer, 4 °C, nitrogen atmosphere) for one year in the absence of antibiotics are examined. The magnetic potency, measured by the saturation magnetization of the particle suspension, drops to one-third of its starting value within this year-about ten times slower than at ambient air and room temperature. The particle size distribution, the integrity of the surrounding magnetosome membrane, the colloidal stability, and the biocompatibility turn out to be not severely affected by long-term storage.

Topics & Concepts

MagnetosomeMagnetotactic bacteriaBiocompatibilityBiomineralizationMagnetic nanoparticlesMaterials scienceSuspension (topology)Chemical engineeringMagnetizationNanoparticleParticle sizeFerrofluidGreigiteNanotechnologyBiophysicsMagnetiteMagnetic fieldBiologyMetallurgyQuantum mechanicsHomotopyMathematicsPure mathematicsPhysicsEngineeringGeomagnetism and Paleomagnetism StudiesGeochemistry and Elemental AnalysisMagnetic and Electromagnetic Effects