Interplay between membrane and nanoparticle mechanical properties during cellular targeting and uptake of flexible nanoparticles
ORAL
Abstract
It is becoming evident that engineered physicochemical characteristics of nanoparticles (NPs) are essential to improve their biological function for their cellular delivery and uptake. How NP mechanical properties impact multivalent ligand-receptor mediated binding to cell surfaces, avidity of NP adhesion to cells, and cooperative effects due to crowding remain largely unknown or unquantified, and how tuning NPs’ stiffness impacts their propensity for internalization is not clear. Here we focus on exploring the binding mechanisms of three distinct NPs that differ in type and rigidity (core-corona flexible NP, rigid NP, and rigid-tethered NP) but are otherwise similar in size; moreover, for the case of flexible NP, we tune NP stiffness by varying the internal crosslinking density. We employed our recent spatial biophysical modeling of NP binding to membranes together with thermodynamic analysis powered by free energy calculations and show that efficient cellular targeting and uptake of functionalized NP can be shaped by factors including NP flexibility and crowding, receptor-ligand binding avidity, state of the membrane cytoskeleton, and curvature inducing proteins. Our findings provide strong evidence that NP flexibility is an important design parameter for rationally engineering NP targeting and uptake in a crowded cellular adhesion microenvironment.
*We acknowledge financial support from the National Institutes of Health through grants CA227550, CA244660.
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Publication: Biophysical Considerations in the Rational Design and Cellular Targeting of Flexible Polymeric Nanoparticles
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-477842/v2
Presenters
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Samaneh Farokhirad
- New Jersey Inst of Tech
- New Jersey institute of Technology