Abstract

Due to their tunable optical properties and their well-defined nanometric size, core/shell nanocrystals (quantum dots, QDs) are extensively used for the design of biomarkers as well as for the preparation of nanostructured hybrid materials. It is thus of great interest to understand their interaction with soft lipidic membranes. Here we present the synthesis of water-soluble peptide CdSe/ZnS QDs and their interaction with the fluid lipidic membrane of vesicles. The use of short peptides results in the formation of small QDs presenting both high fluorescence quantum yield and high colloidal stability as well as a mean hydrodynamical diameter of 10 nm. Their interaction with oppositely charged vesicles of various surface charge and size results in the formation of hybrid giant or large unilamellar vesicles covered with a densely packed layer of QDs without any vesicle rupture, as demonstrated by fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments, zetametry, and optical microscopy. The adhesion of nanocrystals onto the vesicle membrane appears to be sterically limited and induces the reversion of the surface charge of the vesicles. Therefore, their interaction with small unilamellar vesicles induces the formation of a well-defined lamellar hybrid condensed phase in which the QDs are densely packed in the plane of the layers, as shown by freeze-fracture electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering. In this structure, strong undulations of the bilayer maximize the electrostatic interaction between the QDs and the bilayers, as previously observed in the case of DNA polyelectrolytes interacting with small vesicles.

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