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Zeolite Nanoparticles for Selective Sorption of Plasma Proteins.

Authors :
Rahimi M
Ng EP
Bakhtiari K
Vinciguerra M
Ali Ahmad H
Awala H
Mintova S
Daghighi M
Bakhshandeh Rostami F
de Vries M
Motazacker MM
Peppelenbosch MP
Mahmoudi M
Rezaee F
Source :
Scientific reports [Sci Rep] 2015 Nov 30; Vol. 5, pp. 17259. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Nov 30.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The affinity of zeolite nanoparticles (diameter of 8-12 nm) possessing high surface area and high pore volume towards human plasma proteins has been investigated. The protein composition (corona) of zeolite nanoparticles has been shown to be more dependent on the plasma protein concentrations and the type of zeolites than zeolite nanoparticles concentration. The number of proteins present in the corona of zeolite nanoparticles at 100% plasma (in vivo state) is less than with 10% plasma exposure. This could be due to a competition between the proteins to occupy the corona of the zeolite nanoparticles. Moreover, a high selective adsorption for apolipoprotein C-III (APOC-III) and fibrinogen on the zeolite nanoparticles at high plasma concentration (100%) was observed. While the zeolite nanoparticles exposed to low plasma concentration (10%) exhibited a high selective adsorption for immunoglobulin gamma (i.e. IGHG1, IGHG2 and IGHG4) proteins. The zeolite nanoparticles can potentially be used for selectively capture of APOC-III in order to reduce the activation of lipoprotein lipase inhibition during hypertriglyceridemia treatment. The zeolite nanoparticles can be adapted to hemophilic patients (hemophilia A (F-VIII deficient) and hemophilia B (F-IX deficient)) with a risk of bleeding, and thus might be potentially used in combination with the existing therapy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2045-2322
Volume :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Scientific reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26616161
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep17259