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research article

Surface-structure-regulated cell-membrane penetration by monolayer-protected nanoparticles

Verma, Ayush
•
Uzun, Oktay
•
Hu, Yuhua
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2008
Nature Materials

Nanoscale objects are typically internalized by cells into membrane-bounded endosomes and fail to access the cytosolic cell machinery. Whereas some biomacromolecules may penetrate or fuse with cell membranes without overt membrane disruption, no synthetic material of comparable size has shown this property yet. Cationic nano-objects pass through cell membranes by generating transient holes, a process associated with cytotoxicity. Studies aimed at generating cell-penetrating nanomaterials have focused on the effect of size, shape and composition. Here, we compare membrane penetration by two nanoparticle 'isomers' with similar composition (same hydrophobic content), one coated with subnanometre striations of alternating anionic and hydrophobic groups, and the other coated with the same moieties but in a random distribution. We show that the former particles penetrate the plasma membrane without bilayer disruption, whereas the latter are mostly trapped in endosomes. Our results offer a paradigm for analysing the fundamental problem of cell-membrane-penetrating bio- and macro-molecules.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/nmat2202
Author(s)
Verma, Ayush
Uzun, Oktay
Hu, Yuhua
Hu, Ying
Han, Hee-Sun
Watson, Nicki
Chen, Suelin
Irvine, Darrell J.
Stellacci, Francesco  
Date Issued

2008

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

7

Issue

7

Start page

588

End page

595

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
SUNMIL  
Available on Infoscience
June 4, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/68133
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