AI Article Synopsis

  • Ultrasmall silver nanoparticles (2 nm) were created using sodium borohydride and stabilized with the ligand glutathione, leading to both silver nanoparticles and fluorescing silver nanoclusters.
  • Over time, the nanoclusters degrade while glutathione is released from the particles, contributing to the formation of silver sulfide and resulting in major changes to the particle composition.
  • Analyses showed that these transformations, which significantly influence the nanomaterials' toxicity and properties, are not detectable by common imaging techniques, indicating that fresh nanoparticles are more toxic than aged ones due to the presence of silver clusters.

Article Abstract

Ultrasmall silver nanoparticles (2 nm) were prepared by reduction with sodium borohydride (NaBH) and stabilized by the ligand glutathione (a tripeptide: glycine-cysteine-glutamic acid). NMR spectroscopy and optical spectroscopy (UV and fluorescence) revealed that these particles initially consist of silver nanoparticles and fluorescing silver nanoclusters, both stabilized by glutathione. Over time, the silver nanoclusters disappear and only the silver nanoparticles remain. Furthermore, the capping ligand glutathione eliminates hydrogen sulfide (HS) from the central cysteine and is released from the nanoparticle surface as tripeptide glycine-dehydroalanine-glutamic acid. Hydrogen sulfide reacts with the silver core to form silver sulfide. After four weeks in dispersion at 4 °C, this process is completed. These processes cannot be detected by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), or differential centrifugal sedimentation (DCS) as these methods cannot resolve the mixture of nanoparticles and nanoclusters or the nature of the nanoparticle core. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy showed the mostly oxidized state of the silver nanoparticle core, Ag(+I), both in freshly prepared and in aged silver nanoparticles. These results demonstrate that ultrasmall nanoparticles can undergo unnoticed changes that considerably affect their chemical, physical, and biological properties. In particular, freshly prepared ultrasmall silver nanoparticles are much more toxic against cells and bacteria than aged particles because of the presence of the silver clusters.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11397201PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano14171449DOI Listing

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