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Biomimetic Plasmonic Nanophages by Head/Tail Self-Assembling: Gold Nanoparticle/Virus Interactions.

Ahmed, Hazem; Lopez, Hender; Boselli, Francesco; Tarricone, Giulia; Vercellino, Silvia; Costantini, Paolo Emidio; Castagnola, Valentina; Veronesi, Marina; Benfenati, Fabio; Danielli, Alberto; Boselli, Luca; Pompa, Pier Paolo

Biomimetic Plasmonic Nanophages by Head/Tail Self-Assembling: Gold Nanoparticle/Virus Interactions. Thumbnail


Authors

Hazem Ahmed

Hender Lopez

Giulia Tarricone

Silvia Vercellino

Paolo Emidio Costantini

Valentina Castagnola

Marina Veronesi

Fabio Benfenati

Alberto Danielli

Luca Boselli

Pier Paolo Pompa



Abstract

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), because of their dual plasmonic and catalytic functionalities, are among the most promising nanomaterials for the development of therapeutic and diagnostic tools for severe diseases such as cancer and neurodegeneration. Bacteriophages, massively present in human biofluids, are emerging as revolutionary biotechnological tools as they can be engineered to display multiple specific binding moieties, providing effective targeting ability, high stability, low cost, and sustainable production. Coupling AuNPs with phages can lead to an advanced generation of nanotools with great potential for biomedical applications. In the present study, we analyzed the interactions between differently sized AuNPs and filamentous M13 phages, establishing an advanced characterization platform that combines analytical techniques and computational models for an in-depth understanding of these hybrid self-assembling systems. A precise and structurally specific interaction of the AuNP-M13 hybrid complexes was observed, leading to a peculiar head/tail "tadpole-like" configuration. simulations allowed explaining the mechanisms underlying the preferential assembly route and providing information about AuNPs' size-dependent interplay with specific M13 capsid proteins. The AuNP-M13 structures were proven to be biomimetic, eluding the formation of biomolecular corona. By keeping the biological identity of the virion, hybrid nanostructures maintained their natural recognition/targeting ability even in the presence of biomolecular crowding. In addition, we were able to tune the hybrid nanostructures' tropism toward based on the AuNP size. Overall, our results set the fundamental basis and a standard workflow for the development of phage-based targeting nanotools, valuable for a wide spectrum of nanotechnology applications.

Citation

Ahmed, H., Lopez, H., Boselli, F., Tarricone, G., Vercellino, S., Costantini, P. E., Castagnola, V., Veronesi, M., Benfenati, F., Danielli, A., Boselli, L., & Pompa, P. P. (2024). Biomimetic Plasmonic Nanophages by Head/Tail Self-Assembling: Gold Nanoparticle/Virus Interactions. ACS Nano, 18(32), 21302-21315. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c05198

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 25, 2024
Online Publication Date Jul 31, 2024
Publication Date Aug 13, 2024
Deposit Date Aug 23, 2024
Publicly Available Date Oct 21, 2024
Journal ACS nano
Print ISSN 1936-0851
Electronic ISSN 1936-086X
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 18
Issue 32
Pages 21302-21315
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.4c05198
Keywords Particle Size, Metal Nanoparticles - chemistry, M13 bacteriophages, biomolecular corona, self-assembly, Biomimetic Materials - chemistry, gold nanoparticles, plasmonic nanohybrids, bionano interactions, Bacteriophage M13 - chemistry - metabolism, Gold - chemistry, Biomimetics, nanomedicine
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/2760939

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