Biodegradation of Oxide Nanoparticles in Apoferritin Protein Media

A Systematic Electrochemical Approach

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Ehsan Rahimi (Università degli Studi di Udine, TU Delft - Materials Science and Engineering)

Donghoon Kim (ETH Zürich)

Ruben Offoiach (Università degli Studi di Udine)

Roger Sanchis-Gual (ETH Zürich)

Xiang Zhong Chen (ETH Zürich)

Peyman Taheri (TU Delft - Team Peyman Taheri)

Yaiza Gonzalez-Garcia (TU Delft - Team Yaiza Gonzalez Garcia)

Johannes M.C. Mol (TU Delft - Team Arjan Mol)

Lorenzo Fedrizzi (Università degli Studi di Udine)

Salvador Pané (ETH Zürich)

Maria Lekka (Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA))

Department
Materials Science and Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/admi.202300558
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Department
Materials Science and Engineering
Issue number
33
Volume number
10
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Abstract

Functional oxide nanoparticles are extensively utilized in the last decades for biomedical purposes due to their unique functional properties. Nevertheless, their biodegradation mechanism by biological species, particularly by proteins at oxide/protein interfaces, still remains limited. Here, a systematic approaches is provided to investigate electrochemical behavior, electronic properties, and biodegradation mechanism of cobalt ferrite (CFO) and cobalt ferrite-bismuth ferrite (CFO-BFO) core-shell nanoparticles in apoferritin-containing media. Scanning Kelvin probe force microscopy results indicate that the presence of a thin shell (≈5 nm) of BFO on CFO causes a significant increase in surface potential. The potentiodynamic polarization measurements in different solutions showed higher anodic current densities for both samples when decreasing pH and increasing apoferritin concentration. Notably, CFO-BFO exhibits lower anodic current densities than CFO due to a slightly higher flat band potential and lower donor density distribution on CFO-BFO than on CFO, which results in lower electrochemical activity. Long-term monitoring reveals that biodegradation of both nanoparticles is accelerated by high apoferritin concentrations and acidic media, resulting in the decrease of electrochemical potentials and impedance values, and enhancement of metal ion release. Thus, this systematic biodegradation study can help to predict the lifespan and toxicity of these functional nanoparticles in biological environments.