Highly Flexible Platform for Tuning Surface Properties of Silica Nanoparticles and Monitoring Their Biological Interaction
Author(s) -
Isaac OjeaJiménez,
Patricia Urbán,
Francisco Barahona,
Matteo Pedroni,
Robin Capomaccio,
Giacomo Ceccone,
Agnieszka KinsnerOvaskainen,
François Rossi,
Douglas Gilliland
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.5b11216
Subject(s) - materials science , nanoparticle , nanotechnology , particle size , fluorescence , chemical engineering , covalent bond , ethylenediamine , particle (ecology) , surface modification , organic chemistry , chemistry , physics , oceanography , quantum mechanics , geology , engineering
The following work presents a simple, reliable and scalable seeding-growth methodology to prepare silica nanoparticles (SiO2 NPs) (20, 30, 50 and 80 nm) directly in aqueous phase, both as plain- as well as fluorescent-labeled silica. The amount of fluorescent label per particle remained constant regardless of size, which facilitates measurements in terms of number-based concentrations. SiO2 NPs in dispersion were functionalized with an epoxysilane, thus providing a flexible platform for the covalent linkage of wide variety of molecules under mild experimental conditions. This approach was validated with ethylenediamine, two different amino acids and three akylamines to generate a variety of surface modifications. Accurate characterization of particle size, size distributions, morphology and surface chemistry is provided, both for as-synthesized particles and after incubation in cell culture medium. The impact of physicochemical properties of SiO2 NPs was investigated with human alveolar basal epithelial cells (A549) such as the effect in cytotoxicity, cell internalization and membrane interaction.
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