Electrostatic Conjugation of Nanoparticle Surfaces with Functional Peptide Motifs

Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society. We report the surface functionalization of anionic layer by layer nanoparticles (LbL NPs) with cationic tumor-penetrating peptides (TPPs) via electrostatic adsorption while retaining particle stability and charge characteristics. This strategy eliminates t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Boehnke, Natalie (Author), Dolph, Kate J (Author), Juarez, Valeria M (Author), Lanoha, Julia M (Author), Hammond, Paula T (Author)
Other Authors: Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT (Contributor), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021-12-06T14:28:48Z.
Subjects:
Online Access:Get fulltext
Description
Summary:Copyright © 2020 American Chemical Society. We report the surface functionalization of anionic layer by layer nanoparticles (LbL NPs) with cationic tumor-penetrating peptides (TPPs) via electrostatic adsorption while retaining particle stability and charge characteristics. This strategy eliminates the need for structural modifications of the peptide and enables facile functionalization of surface chemistries difficult to modify or inaccessible via covalent conjugation strategies. We show that both carboxylated and sulfated LbL NPs are able to accommodate linear and cyclic TPPs and used fluorescence-based detection assays to quantify peptide loading per NP. We also demonstrate that TPP activity is retained upon adsorption, implying sufficient numbers of peptides take on the appropriate surface orientation, enabling efficient uptake of functionalized NPs in vitro, as characterized via flow cytometry and deconvolution microscopy. Overall, we believe that this strategy will serve as a broadly applicable approach to impart electrostatically assembled NPs with bioactive peptide motifs.
National Cancer Institute (Grant P30-CA14051)