Temperature-Responsive Magnetic Nanoparticles for Enabling Affinity Separation of Extracellular Vesicles.
Ramon JaureguiSelvi SrinivasanLucia N VojtechHilary S GammillDaniel T ChiuFlorian HladikPatrick S StaytonJames J LaiPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Small magnetic nanoparticles that have surfaces decorated with stimuli-responsive polymers can be reversibly aggregated via a stimulus, such as temperature, to enable efficient and rapid biomarker separation. To fully realize the potential of these particles, the synthesis needs to be highly reproducible and scalable to large quantity. We have developed a new synthesis for temperature-responsive magnetic nanoparticles via an in situ co-precipitation process of Fe2+/Fe3+ salts at room temperature with poly(acrylic acid)- block-poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) diblock co-polymer template, synthesized via the reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization method. These particles were 56% polymer by weight with a 6.5:1 Fe/COOH ratio and demonstrated remarkable stability over a 2 month period. The hydrodynamic diameter remained constant at ∼28 nm with a consistent transition temperature of 34 °C, and the magnetic particle separation efficiency at 40 °C was ≥95% over the 2 month span. These properties were maintained for all large-scale synthesis batches. To demonstrate the practical utility of the stimuli-responsive magnetic nanoparticles, the particles were incorporated into a temperature-responsive binary reagent system and efficiently separated a model protein biomarker (mouse IgG) as well as purified extracellular vesicles derived from a human biofluid, seminal plasma. The ease of using these particles will prove beneficial for various biomedical applications.
Keyphrases
- magnetic nanoparticles
- cancer therapy
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- endothelial cells
- liquid chromatography
- drug delivery
- body mass index
- photodynamic therapy
- risk assessment
- optic nerve
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- high resolution
- weight gain
- amino acid
- optical coherence tomography
- cystic fibrosis
- binding protein
- reduced graphene oxide
- sensitive detection