Inner-View of Nanomaterial Incited Protein Conformational Changes: Insights into Designable Interaction.

Journal: Research (Washington, D.C.)
Published Date:

Abstract

Nanoparticle bioreactivity critically depends upon interaction between proteins and nanomaterials (NM). The formation of the "protein corona" (PC) is the effect of such nanoprotein interactions. PC has a wide usage in pharmaceuticals, drug delivery, medicine, and industrial biotechnology. Therefore, a detailed in-vitro, in-vivo, and in-silico understanding of nanoprotein interaction is fundamental and has a genuine contemporary appeal. NM surfaces can modify the protein conformation during interaction, or NMs themselves can lead to self-aggregations. Both phenomena can change the whole downstream bioreactivity of the concerned nanosystem. The main aim of this review is to understand the mechanistic view of NM-protein interaction and recapitulate the underlying physical chemistry behind the formation of such complicated macromolecular assemblies, to provide a critical overview of the different models describing NM induced structural and functional modification of proteins. The review also attempts to point out the current limitation in understanding the field and highlights the future scopes, involving a plausible proposition of how artificial intelligence could be aided to explore such systems for the prediction and directed design of the desired NM-protein interactions.

Authors

  • Arka Mukhopadhyay
    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Process Engineering in Life Sciences, Germany.
  • Sankar Basu
    Clemson University, Computational Biophysics Group, Department of Physics and Astronomy, South Carolina, USA.
  • Santiswarup Singha
    Department of Microbiology Immunology and Infectious Diseases, University of Calgary, 3280 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
  • Hirak K Patra
    Linkoping University, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Linkoping, Sweden.

Keywords

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