Differential centrifugal sedimentation (DCS) has been applied to accurately size ligand-protected gold hydrosols in the 10 to 50 nm range. A simple protocol is presented to correct for particle density variations due to the presence of the ligand shell, which is formed here by either polyethylene glycol-substituted alkane thiols (PEG-alkane thiols) of different chain length or oligopeptides. The method gives reliable data for all particle sizes investigated and lends itself to rapid routine sizing of nanoparticles. Unlike TEM, DCS is highly sensitive to small changes in the thickness of the organic ligand shell and can be applied to monitor shell thickness variations of as little as 0.1 nm on particles of a given core size.
It
is demonstrated that the adsorption of bovine serum albumin
(BSA) to aqueous gold colloids can be quantified with molecular resolution
by differential centrifugal sedimentation (DCS). This method separates
colloidal particles of comparable density by mass. When proteins adsorb
to the nanoparticles, both their mass and their effective density
change, which strongly affects the sedimentation time. A straightforward
analysis allows quantification of the adsorbed layer. Most importantly,
unlike many other methods, DCS can be used to detect chemisorbed proteins
(“hard corona”) as well as physisorbed proteins (“soft
corona”). The results for BSA on gold colloid nanoparticles
can be modeled in terms of Langmuir-type adsorption isotherms (Hill
model). The effects of surface modification with small thiol-PEG ligands
on protein adsorption are also demonstrated.
The self-assembly and self-organization of small molecules on the surface of nanoparticles constitute a potential route toward the preparation of advanced proteinlike nanosystems. However, their structural characterization, critical to the design of bionanomaterials with well-defined biophysical and biochemical properties, remains highly challenging. Here, a computational model for peptide-capped gold nanoparticles (GNPs) is developed using experimentally characterized Cys-Ala-Leu-Asn-Asn (CALNN)- and Cys-Phe-Gly-Ala-Ile-Leu-Ser-Ser (CFGAILSS)-capped GNPs as a benchmark. The structure of CALNN and CFGAILSS monolayers is investigated using both structural biology techniques and molecular dynamics simulations. The calculations reproduce the experimentally observed dependence of the monolayer secondary structure on the peptide capping density and on the nanoparticle size, thus giving us confidence in the model. Furthermore, the computational results reveal a number of new features of peptide-capped monolayers, including the importance of sulfur movement for the formation of secondary structure motifs, the presence of water close to the gold surface even in tightly packed peptide monolayers, and the existence of extended 2D parallel β-sheet domains in CFGAILSS monolayers. The model developed here provides a predictive tool that may assist in the design of further bionanomaterials.
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