Title
Effects of DC Magnetic Fields on Magnetoliposomes
11627/575111627/5751
Author
Nuñez Magos, Leonardo
De Lira Escobedo, Jonathan Said
Rodríguez López, Raymundo
Muñoz Navia, Milton de Jesús
Castillo Rivera, José Juan Francisco
Viveros Méndez, Perla Xochil
Araujo Palomo, Elsie Evelyn
Encinas Oropesa, Armando
Saucedo Anaya, Sonia Azucena
Aranda Espinoza, Said Eduardo
Abstract
"The potential use of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) in biomedicine as magnetic resonance, drug delivery, imagenology, hyperthermia, biosensors, and biological separation has been studied in different laboratories. One of the challenges on MNP elaboration for biological applications is the size, biocompatibility, heat efficiency, stabilization in physiological conditions, and surface coating. Magnetoliposome (ML), a lipid bilayer of phospholipids encapsulating MNPs, is a system used to reduce toxicity. Encapsulated MNPs can be used as a potential drug and a gene delivery system, and in the presence of magnetic fields, MLs can be accumulated in a target tissue by a strong gradient magnetic field. Here, we present a study of the effects of DC magnetic fields on encapsulated MNPs inside liposomes. Despite their widespread applications in biotechnology and environmental, biomedical, and materials science, the effects of magnetic fields on MLs are unclear. We use a modified coprecipitation method to synthesize superparamagnetic nanoparticles (SNPs) in aqueous solutions. The SNPs are encapsulated inside phospholipid liposomes to study the interaction between phospholipids and SNPs. Material characterization of SNPs reveals round-shaped nanoparticles with an average size of 12 nm, mainly magnetite. MLs were prepared by the rehydration method. After formation, we found two types of MLs: one type is tense with SNPs encapsulated and the other is a floppy vesicle that does not show the presence of SNPs. To study the response of MLs to an applied DC magnetic field, we used a homemade chamber. Digitalized images show encapsulated SNPs assembled in chain formation when a DC magnetic field is applied. When the magnetic field is switched off, it completely disperses SNPs. Floppy MLs deform along the direction of the external applied magnetic field. Solving the relevant magnetostatic equations, we present a theoretical model to explain the ML deformations by analyzing the forces exerted by the magnetic field over the surface of the spheroidal liposome. Tangential magnetic forces acting on the ML surface result in a press force deforming MLs. The type of deformations will depend on the magnetic properties of the mediums inside and outside the MLs. The model predicts a coexistence region of oblate-prolate deformation in the zone where chi = 1. We can understand the chain formation in terms of a dipole-dipole interaction of SNP."
Publication date
2021Publication type
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2021.703417Knowledge area
BIOQUÍMICAPublisher
Frontiers Media S.A.Keywords
MagnetoliposomesLiposome deformation
Magnetic nanoparticles
Lipid membranes
Magnetic field,
Biological effects