Coating Metal Nanoparticle Surfaces with Small Organic Molecules Can Reduce Nonspecific Cell Uptake.
Desiree Van HauteAlice T LiuJacob M BerlinPublished in: ACS nano (2018)
Elucidation of mechanisms of uptake of nanoparticles by cells and methods to prevent this uptake is essential for many applications of nanoparticles. Most recent studies have focused on the role of proteins that coat nanoparticles and have employed PEGylation, particularly dense coatings of PEG, to reduce protein opsonization and cell uptake. Here we show that small molecule coatings on metallic nanoparticles can markedly reduce cell uptake for very sparsely PEGylated nanoparticles. Similar results were obtained in media with and without proteins, suggesting that protein opsonization is not the primary driver of this phenomenon. The reduction in cell uptake is proportional to the degree of surface coverage by the small molecules. Probing cell uptake pathways using inhibitors suggested that the primary role of increased surface coverage is to reduce nanoparticles' interactions with the scavenger receptors. This work highlights an under-investigated mechanism of cell uptake that may have played a role in many other studies and also suggests that a wide variety of molecules can be used alongside PEGylation to stably passivate nanoparticle surfaces for low cell uptake.