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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Preparation of the Protein Corona: How Washing Shapes the Proteome and Influences Cellular Uptake

Shuai JiangMaximilian BrücknerKatharina LandfesterJohanna SimonVolker Mailänder

subject

Protein structureIn vivoChemistryProteomeBiophysicsProtein CoronaNanocarriersBlood proteinsIn vitroProtein adsorption

description

A protein coat, termed the protein corona, assembles around the nanocarriers´ surface once it gets in contact with a biological environment. We show that the media used for washing of the protein corona can be crucial. This is true for downstream analysis as well as for precoating for in vitro or in vivo use. This has been widely overlooked so far. We focus on the choice of eight different washing media and how they influence the composition of the hard protein corona of several nanocarriers incubated with human blood plasma and serum. SDS-PAGE and LC-MS analysis showed major differences in protein corona profiles when using diverse washing media. While plasma and serum proteins already have different complexities, each washing media changes the composition of proteins detected by downstream methods with different key proteins bound to the nanocarriers´ surface. Furthermore, the protein structure of the most abundant blood proteins incubated in the different media was analyzed with nanoDSF. This additionally emphasized the importance of washing media, which had a significant influence on protein adsorption stability. Lastly, cell uptake experiments for HeLa and RAW 264.7 macrophages also indicated an influence of the washing media. In conclusion, picking a specific washing media is on the one hand an important factor for downstream detection of protein compositions and may on the other hand be used to deliberately tune the protein corona for pre-adsorbed proteins from complex protein compositions. This might further support a guided delivery of the nanocarrier to a desired location within a physiological environment.

https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3539203