
Tommy Cedervall
Associate Professor, Coordinator Nanosafety

Electron microscopy imaging of proteins on gallium phosphide semiconductor nanowires
Author
Summary, in English
We have imaged GaP nanowires (NWs) incubated with human laminin, serum albumin (HSA), and blood plasma using both cryo-transmission electron microscopy and synchrotron based X-ray photoemission electron microscopy. This extensive imaging methodology simultaneously reveals structural, chemical and morphological details of individual nanowires and the adsorbed proteins. We found that the proteins bind to NWs, forming coronas with thicknesses close to the proteins' hydrodynamic diameters. We could directly image how laminin is extending from the NWs, maximizing the number of proteins bound to the NWs. NWs incubated with both laminin and HSA show protein coronas with a similar appearance to NWs incubated with laminin alone, indicating that the presence of HSA does not affect the laminin conformation on the NWs. In blood plasma, an intermediate sized corona around the NWs indicates a corona with a mixture of plasma proteins. The ability to directly visualize proteins on nanostructures in situ holds great promise for assessing the conformation and thickness of the protein corona, which is key to understanding and predicting the properties of engineered nanomaterials in a biological environment.
Department/s
- Synchrotron Radiation Research
- Biochemistry and Structural Biology
- MAX IV Laboratory
- Centre for Analysis and Synthesis
- Solid State Physics
- NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience
Publishing year
2016
Language
English
Pages
3936-3943
Publication/Series
Nanoscale
Volume
8
Issue
7
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Topic
- Nano Technology
- Other Physics Topics
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2040-3372