posted on 2018-05-09, 00:00authored byXiuru Liu, Xiaoqiu Li, Wu Xu, Xiaohan Zhang, Zhicheng Huang, Feng Wang, Juewen Liu
A hallmark of nanoscience
is size-dependent and distance-dependent
physical properties. Although most previous studies focused on optical
properties, which are often tuned at nanometer scale, we herein report
on the interaction between halide-capped gold nanoparticles (AuNPs)
and phosphocholine (PC) liposomes at the sub-Angstrom level. Halide-capped
AuNPs are adsorbed by PC liposomes attributable to van der Waals force.
Iodide-capped AuNPs interact much more weakly with the liposomes compared
with bromide- and chloride-capped AuNPs, as indicated by a liposome
leakage assay and differential scanning calorimetry. This is explained
by the slightly larger size of iodide separating the AuNP core more
from the liposome surface. Cryo-transmission electron microscopy indicates
that the liposomes remain intact when mixed with these halide-capped
AuNPs of 13 or 70 nm in diameter. Other even larger ligands, including
small thiol compounds, DNA oligonucleotides, proteins, and polymers,
fully blocked the interaction, whereas AuNPs dispersed in noninteracting
ions, including fluoride, phosphate, perchlorate, nitrate, sulfate,
and bicarbonate, are still adsorbed strongly by 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine liposomes. Taken together, halides
can be used to control interparticle distances at an extremely small
scale with remarkable effects on materials properties, allowing surface
probing, biosensor development, and fundamental surface science studies.