Litcius/Paper detail

Formation of a Highly Stable and Nontoxic Protein Corona upon Interaction of Human α-1-Acid Glycoprotein (AGP) with Citrate-Stabilized Silver Nanoparticles

Amin Sahraei, F. Mohammadi, Rabah Boukherroub, Sabine Szunerits

2020Langmuir27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Given the importance of protein corona in determining cellular responses to nanoparticles, numerous studies have been devoted to finding stable, biocompatible, and nontoxic protein corona. In this work, the interaction between human α-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) and citrate-stabilized silver (Ag-CIT) nanoparticles of about 10 nm was methodically studied using molecular docking simulation approach and various experimental techniques. It could be shown that a stable Ag-CIT/AGP bioconjugate was formed with a high binding constant of 109 M–1, several orders of magnitude larger than that of other highly abundant serum proteins. Formation of AGP corona was accompanied by conserving the native conformation of the protein and further associated with a considerable decrease in the cytotoxicity of the silver nanoparticles.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistrySilver nanoparticleNanoparticleGlycoproteinCytotoxicityBioconjugationBiophysicsCorona (planetary geology)NanotoxicologyChemical engineeringNanotechnologyBiochemistryMaterials scienceIn vitroBiologyEngineeringPhysicsAstrobiologyVenusNanoparticle-Based Drug DeliveryProtein Interaction Studies and Fluorescence AnalysisNanoparticles: synthesis and applications