Conjugation of hydroxyapatite nanocrystals with human immunoglobulin G for nanomedical applications

Michele Iafisco, Elena Varoni, Michele Di Foggia, Stefano Pietronave, Milena Fini, Norberto Roveri, Lia Rimondini, Maria Prat

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo in rivistapeer review

Abstract

Inorganic nanosized drug carriers are a promising field in nanomedicine applied to cancer. Their conjugation with antibodies combines the properties of the nanoparticles themselves with the specific and selective recognition ability of the antibodies to antigens. Biomimetic carbonate-hydroxyapatite (HA) nanoparticles were synthesized and fully characterized; human IgGs, used as model antibodies, were coupled to these nanocrystals. The maximum loading amount, the interaction modelling, the preferential orientation and the secondary structure modifications were evaluated using theoretical models (Langmuir, Freundlich and Langmuir-Freundlich) spectroscopic (UV-Vis, Raman), calorimetric (TGA), and immunochemical techniques (ELISA, Western Blot). HA nanoparticles of about 30nm adsorbed human IgGs, in a dose-dependent, saturable and stable manner with micromolar affinity and adsorption capability around 2.3mg/m 2. Adsorption isotherm could be described by Langmuir-Freundlich model, and was due to both energetically homogeneous and heterogeneous binding sites on HA surface, mainly of electrostatic nature. Binding did not induce secondary structure modification of IgGs. A preferential IgG end-on orientation with the involvement of IgG Fc moiety in the adsorption seems most probable due to the steric hindrance of their Fab domains. Biomimetic HA nanocrystals are suitable substrates to produce nanoparticles which can be functionalized with antibodies for efficient targeted drug delivery to tumours.

Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)1-7
Numero di pagine7
RivistaColloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces
Volume90
Numero di pubblicazione1
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 1 feb 2012

Fingerprint

Entra nei temi di ricerca di 'Conjugation of hydroxyapatite nanocrystals with human immunoglobulin G for nanomedical applications'. Insieme formano una fingerprint unica.

Cita questo