Unravelling Heterogeneities in Complement and Antibody Opsonization of Individual Liposomes as a Function of Surface Architecture.
Rasmus MünterCamilla StavnsbjergEsben ChristensenMikkel E ThomsenAllan StensballeAlbert Juan Fuglsang-MadsenLadan ParhamifarKasper KristensenJens B SimonsenJannik Bruun LarsenThomas Lars AndresenPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Coating nanoparticles with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) is widely used to achieve long-circulating properties after infusion. While PEG reduces binding of opsonins to the particle surface, immunogenic anti-PEG side-effects show that PEGylated nanoparticles are not truly "stealth" to surface active proteins. A major obstacle for understanding the complex interplay between opsonins and nanoparticles is the averaging effects of the bulk assays that are typically applied to study protein adsorption to nanoparticles. Here, a microscopy-based method for directly quantifying opsonization at the single nanoparticle level is presented. Various surface coatings are investigated on liposomes, including PEG, and show that opsonization by both antibodies and complement C3b is highly dependent on the surface chemistry. It is further demonstrated that this opsonization is heterogeneous, with opsonized and non-opsonized liposomes co-existing in the same ensemble. Surface coatings modify the percentage of opsonized liposomes and/or opsonin surface density on the liposomes, with strikingly different patterns for antibodies and complement. Thus, this assay provides mechanistic details about opsonization at the single nanoparticle level previously inaccessible to established bulk assays.