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Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions

[Image: see text] The ligand shells of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) can serve different purposes. In general, they provide colloidal stability by introducing steric repulsion between NPs. In the context of biological applications, the ligand shell plays a critical role in targeting, enabling NPs to...

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Autores principales: Schulz, Florian, Hühn, Jonas, Werner, Marco, Hühn, Dominik, Kvelstad, Julia, Koert, Ulrich, Wutke, Nicole, Klapper, Markus, Fröba, Michael, Baulin, Vladimir, Parak, Wolfgang J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10552541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37607332
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.3c00139
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author Schulz, Florian
Hühn, Jonas
Werner, Marco
Hühn, Dominik
Kvelstad, Julia
Koert, Ulrich
Wutke, Nicole
Klapper, Markus
Fröba, Michael
Baulin, Vladimir
Parak, Wolfgang J.
author_facet Schulz, Florian
Hühn, Jonas
Werner, Marco
Hühn, Dominik
Kvelstad, Julia
Koert, Ulrich
Wutke, Nicole
Klapper, Markus
Fröba, Michael
Baulin, Vladimir
Parak, Wolfgang J.
author_sort Schulz, Florian
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The ligand shells of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) can serve different purposes. In general, they provide colloidal stability by introducing steric repulsion between NPs. In the context of biological applications, the ligand shell plays a critical role in targeting, enabling NPs to achieve specific biodistributions. However, there is also another important feature of the ligand shell of NPs, namely, the creation of a local environment differing from the bulk of the solvent in which the NPs are dispersed. It is known that charged ligand shells can attract or repel ions and change the effective charge of a NP through Debye–Hückel screening. Positively charged ions, such as H(+) (or H(3)O(+)) are attracted to negatively charged surfaces, whereas negatively charged ions, such as Cl(–) are repelled. The distribution of the ions around charged NP surfaces is a radial function of distance from the center of the NP, which is governed by a balance of electrostatic forces and entropy of ions and ligands. As a result, the ion concentration at the NP surface is different from its bulk equilibrium concentration, i.e., the charged ligand shell around the NPs has formed a distinct local environment. This not only applies to charged ligand shells but also follows a more general principle of induced condensation and depletion. Polar/apolar ligand shells, for example, result in a locally increased concentration of polar/apolar molecules. Similar effects can be seen for biocatalysts like enzymes immobilized in nanoporous host structures, which provide a special environment due to their surface chemistry and geometrical nanoconfinement. The formation of a local environment close to the ligand shell of NPs has profound implications for NP sensing applications. As a result, analyte concentrations close to the ligand shell, which are the ones that are measured, may be very different from the analyte concentrations in bulk. Based on previous work describing this effect, it will be discussed herein how such local environments, created by the choice of used ligands, may allow for tailoring the NPs’ sensing properties. In general, the ligand shell around NPs can be attractive/repulsive for molecules with distinct properties and thus forms an environment that can modulate the specific response. Such local environments can also be optimized to modulate chemical reactions close to the NP surface (for example, by size filtering within pores) or to attract specific low abundance proteins. The importance hereby is that this is based on interaction with low selectivity between the ligands and the target molecules.
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spelling pubmed-105525412023-10-06 Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions Schulz, Florian Hühn, Jonas Werner, Marco Hühn, Dominik Kvelstad, Julia Koert, Ulrich Wutke, Nicole Klapper, Markus Fröba, Michael Baulin, Vladimir Parak, Wolfgang J. Acc Chem Res [Image: see text] The ligand shells of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) can serve different purposes. In general, they provide colloidal stability by introducing steric repulsion between NPs. In the context of biological applications, the ligand shell plays a critical role in targeting, enabling NPs to achieve specific biodistributions. However, there is also another important feature of the ligand shell of NPs, namely, the creation of a local environment differing from the bulk of the solvent in which the NPs are dispersed. It is known that charged ligand shells can attract or repel ions and change the effective charge of a NP through Debye–Hückel screening. Positively charged ions, such as H(+) (or H(3)O(+)) are attracted to negatively charged surfaces, whereas negatively charged ions, such as Cl(–) are repelled. The distribution of the ions around charged NP surfaces is a radial function of distance from the center of the NP, which is governed by a balance of electrostatic forces and entropy of ions and ligands. As a result, the ion concentration at the NP surface is different from its bulk equilibrium concentration, i.e., the charged ligand shell around the NPs has formed a distinct local environment. This not only applies to charged ligand shells but also follows a more general principle of induced condensation and depletion. Polar/apolar ligand shells, for example, result in a locally increased concentration of polar/apolar molecules. Similar effects can be seen for biocatalysts like enzymes immobilized in nanoporous host structures, which provide a special environment due to their surface chemistry and geometrical nanoconfinement. The formation of a local environment close to the ligand shell of NPs has profound implications for NP sensing applications. As a result, analyte concentrations close to the ligand shell, which are the ones that are measured, may be very different from the analyte concentrations in bulk. Based on previous work describing this effect, it will be discussed herein how such local environments, created by the choice of used ligands, may allow for tailoring the NPs’ sensing properties. In general, the ligand shell around NPs can be attractive/repulsive for molecules with distinct properties and thus forms an environment that can modulate the specific response. Such local environments can also be optimized to modulate chemical reactions close to the NP surface (for example, by size filtering within pores) or to attract specific low abundance proteins. The importance hereby is that this is based on interaction with low selectivity between the ligands and the target molecules. American Chemical Society 2023-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC10552541/ /pubmed/37607332 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.3c00139 Text en © 2023 American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Schulz, Florian
Hühn, Jonas
Werner, Marco
Hühn, Dominik
Kvelstad, Julia
Koert, Ulrich
Wutke, Nicole
Klapper, Markus
Fröba, Michael
Baulin, Vladimir
Parak, Wolfgang J.
Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title_full Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title_fullStr Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title_full_unstemmed Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title_short Local Environments Created by the Ligand Coating of Nanoparticles and Their Implications for Sensing and Surface Reactions
title_sort local environments created by the ligand coating of nanoparticles and their implications for sensing and surface reactions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10552541/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37607332
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.3c00139
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