Revealing the role of oxidation state in interaction between nitro/amino-derived particulate matter and blood proteins

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Abstract

Surface oxidation states of ultrafine particulate matter can influence the proinflammatory responses and reactive oxygen species levels in tissue. Surface active species of vehicle-emission soot can serve as electron transfer-mediators in mitochondrion. Revealing the role of surface oxidation state in particles-proteins interaction will promote the understanding on metabolism and toxicity. Here, the surface oxidation state was modeled by nitro/amino ligands on nanoparticles, the interaction with blood proteins were evaluated by capillary electrophoresis quantitatively. The nitro shown larger affinity than amino. On the other hand, the affinity to hemoglobin is 10 3 times larger than that to BSA. Further, molecular docking indicated the difference of binding intensity were mainly determined by hydrophobic forces and hydrogen bonds. These will deepen the quantitative understanding of protein-nanoparticles interaction from the perspective of surface chemical state.

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Liu, Z., Li, P., Bian, W., Yu, J., & Zhan, J. (2016). Revealing the role of oxidation state in interaction between nitro/amino-derived particulate matter and blood proteins. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep25909

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