PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Biophysical comparison of four silver nanoparticles coatings using microscopy, hyperspectral imaging and flow cytometry.

  • Robert M Zucker,
  • Jayna Ortenzio,
  • Laura L Degn,
  • Jeremy M Lerner,
  • William K Boyes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. e0219078

Abstract

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This study compared the relative cellular uptake of 80 nm silver nanoparticles (AgNP) with four different coatings including: branched polyethyleneimine (bPEI), citrate (CIT), polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), and polyethylene glycol (PEG). A gold nanoparticle PVP was also compared to the silver nanoparticles. Biophysical parameters of cellular uptake and effects included flow cytometry side scatter (SSC) intensity, nuclear light scatter, cell cycle distributions, surface plasmonic resonance (SPR), fluorescence microscopy of mitochondrial gross structure, and darkfield hyperspectral imaging. The AgNP-bPEI were positively charged and entered cells at a higher rate than the negatively or neutrally charged particles. The AgNP-bPEI were toxic to the cells at lower doses than the other coatings which resulted in mitochondria being transformed from a normal string-like appearance to small round beaded structures. Hyperspectral imaging showed that AgNP-bPEI and AgNP-CIT agglomerated in the cells and on the slides, which was evident by longer spectral wavelengths of scattered light compared to AgNP-PEG and AgNP-PVP particles. In unfixed cells, AgNP-CIT and AgNP-bPEI had higher SPR than either AgNP-PEG or AgNP-PVP particles, presumably due to greater intracellular agglomeration. After 24 hr. incubation with AgNP-bPEI, there was a dose-dependent decrease in the G1 phase and an increase in the G2/M and S phases of the cell cycle suggestive of cell cycle inhibition. The nuclei of all the AgNP treated cells showed a dose-dependent increase in nanoparticles following non-ionic detergent treatment in which the nuclei retained extra-nuclear AgNP, suggesting that nanoparticles were attached to the nuclei or cytoplasm and not removed by detergent lysis. In summary, positively charged AgNP-bPEI increased particle cellular uptake. Particles agglomerated in the peri-nuclear region, increased mitochondrial toxicity, disturbed the cell cycle, and caused abnormal adherence of extranuclear material to the nucleus after detergent lysis of cells. These results illustrate the importance of nanoparticle surface coatings and charge in determining potentially toxic cellular interactions.