posted on 2020-04-28, 19:43authored byYuwei Zhang, Jamie L. Y. Wu, James Lazarovits, Warren C. W. Chan
Blood proteins adsorb
onto the surface of nanoparticles after intravenous
injection to form a protein corona. The underlying organization and
binding function of these adsorbed proteins remain unclear. This can
impact how the corona mediates cell and tissue interactions. Here,
we investigated the function and structural organization of the protein
corona using an immunoassay approach. We discovered that only 27%
of the adsorbed proteins examined are functional for binding to their
target protein. This is because the corona architecture is not a monolayer,
but an assembly of proteins that are bound to each other. We further
demonstrated that we can control the binding functionality of a protein
by changing the organization of proteins in the assembly. We show
that manipulation of the corona protein composition and assembly can
influence their interactions with macrophage cells in culture. This
study provides detailed functional and structural insights into the
protein corona on nanomaterials and offers a new strategy to manipulate
it for controlled interactions with the biological system.