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research article

Electrical Method to Quantify Nanoparticle Interaction with Lipid Bilayers

Carney, Randy P.
•
Astier, Yann
•
Carney, Tamara M.
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2013
Acs Nano

Understanding as well as rapidly screening the interaction of nanoparticles with cell membranes is of central importance for biological applications such as drug and gene delivery. Recently, we have shown that "striped" mixed-monolayer-coated gold nanoparticles spontaneously penetrate a variety of cell membranes through a passive pathway. Here, we report an electrical approach to screen and readily quantify the interaction between nanoparticles and bilayer lipid membranes. Membrane adsorption is monitored through the capacitive increase of suspended planar lipid membranes upon fusion with nanoparticles. We adopt a Langmuir isotherm model to characterize the adsorption of nanoparticles by bilayer lipid membranes and extract the partition coefficient, K, and the standard free energy gain by this spontaneous process, for a variety of sizes of cell-membrane-penetrating nanoparticles. We believe that the method presented here will be a useful qualitative and quantitative tool to determine nanoparticle interaction with lipid bilayers and consequently with cell membranes.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/nn3036304
Web of Science ID

WOS:000315618700009

Author(s)
Carney, Randy P.
•
Astier, Yann
•
Carney, Tamara M.
•
Voitchovsky, Kislon  
•
Silva, Paulo H. Jacob
•
Stellacci, Francesco  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Acs Nano
Volume

7

Issue

2

Start page

932

End page

942

Subjects

amphiphilic nanoparticles

•

colloidal synthesis

•

planar lipid bilayers

•

black lipid membranes

•

electrophysiology

•

endocytosis

•

cell membrane penetration

•

internalization

•

surface structure

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SUNMIL  
Available on Infoscience
April 19, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/91635
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