<p>Engineered nanoparticles (NPs) pose a broad spectrum of interesting properties that make them useful for many applications. However, continuous exposure to NPs requires the need to deeply understand the outcomes when these NPs interact with different biological environments. After exposure within (to) these environments, the pristine surfaces of NPs strongly interact with the molecules from the surrounding medium, including metabolites, lipids, glycan, and proteins, forming the so-called protein corona (PC). It is well established that the NP-PC strongly influences the biological fate of various NPs types, including cellular uptake, toxicity, and biodistribution. Thus, for a proper assessment of potential hazards associated with engineered NPs, it is mandatory to study and evaluate the PC that forms around NPs. Herein, we describe protocols in detail for the isolation and characterization of NP-PC complexes and cover the following aspects: 1) isolation protocols for different nanomaterials in a range of exposing media, including magnetic isolation methods for superparamagnetic NPs, 2) NP physico-chemical characterization using advanced and standard techniques available in regular laboratories, and 3) NP- PC characterization of the protein and glycan components. </p>
Funding
European Union’s Research and Innovation Programme Horizon 2020 under grant agreements no. 952924 (SUNSHINE), no. 760928 (BIORIMA)
Marie Sklodowska-Curie no. 814236 (Nanocarb),
Platform Optimisation To Enable NanomaTerIAL safety assessment for rapid commercialisation
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding authors.
Comments
The original article is available at https://www.frontiersin.org/
Published Citation
Soliman MG, et al. Protocols for isolation and characterization of nanoparticle biomolecular corona complexes. Front Toxicol. 2024;6:1393330.