Polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers
are hyperbranched, nanosized
polymers with promising biomedical applications as nanocarriers in
targeted drug delivery and gene therapy. For the development of safe
dendrimer-based biomedical applications it is necessary to gain an
understanding of the detailed mechanism of the interactions of both
cationic and anionic dendrimers with cell membranes. To characterize
dendrimer–membrane interactions we applied solid-supported
lipid bilayers as biomembrane models and utilized infrared–visible
sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy to independently probe the
interactions of cationic G5-NH2 and anionic G4.5-COONa
dendrimers with the two leaflets of the lipid bilayers. Interaction
with both dendrimers led to changes in the interfacial water structure
and charge density as evidenced by the changes in the OH band intensities
in the sum-frequency spectra of the bilayers. Interaction with the
G5-NH2 dendrimer also led to a unique inversion of the
sign of the OH-stretch amplitudes, in addition to a decrease in their
absolute values. We suggest that the positively charged amino groups
on the G5-NH2 dendrimer surface bind to the negatively
charged bilayer, while uncompensated positive charges not involved
in the binding cause a reversal of the electric field and thus an
opposite orientation of the interfacial water molecules. More subtle
but nonetheless significant changes were seen in the relative magnitudes
of the CH amplitudes. The methyl antisymmetric to symmetric stretch
amplitude ratios are altered, implying changes in the tilt angles
of the phospholipid alkyl chains. The conformational order of the
phospholipid alkyl chains of both leaflets is also influenced by the
G5-NH2 dendrimer while G4.5-COONa has no effect on the
alkyl chain conformation.