posted on 2017-04-05, 08:19authored byNicoletta Giamblanco, Giovanni Marletta, Alain Graillot, Nicolas Bia, Cédric Loubat, Jean-François Berret
Recent
surveys have shown that the number of nanoparticle-based
formulations actually used at a clinical level is significantly lower
than that expected a decade ago. One reason for this is that the physicochemical
properties of nanoparticles fall short for handling the complexity
of biological environments and preventing nonspecific protein adsorption.
In this study, we address the issue of the interactions of plasma
proteins with polymer-coated surfaces. With this aim, we use a noncovalent
grafting-to method to functionalize iron oxide sub-10 nm nanoparticles
and iron oxide flat substrates and compare their protein responses.
The functionalized copolymers consist of alternating poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG) chains and phosphonic acid grafted on the same backbone.
Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation was used to monitor polymer
adsorption kinetics and evaluate the resistance to protein adsorption.
On flat substrates, functionalized PEG copolymers adsorb and form
a brush in moderate or highly stretched regimes, with densities between
0.15 and 1.5 nm–2. PEG layers using phosphonic acid
as linkers exhibit excellent protein resistance. In contrast, layers
prepared with carboxylic acid as the grafting agent exhibit mitigated
protein responses and layer destructuration. The present study establishes
a correlation between the long-term stability of PEG-coated particles
in biofluids and the protein resistance of surfaces coated with the
same polymers.