Abstract

AbstractRecently, nanoparticles have attracted much attention as new scaffolds for hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOCs). Indeed, the development of bionanotechnology paves the way for the rational design of blood substitutes, providing that the interaction between the nanoparticles and hemoglobin at a molecular scale and its effect on the oxygenation properties of hemoglobin are finely controlled. Here, we show that human hemoglobin has a high affinity for silica nanoparticles, leading to the adsorption of hemoglobin tetramers on the surface. The adsorption process results in a remarkable retaining of the oxygenation properties of human adult hemoglobin and sickle cell hemoglobin, associated with an increase of the oxygen affinity. The cooperative oxygen binding exhibited by adsorbed hemoglobin and the comparison with the oxygenation properties of diaspirin cross-linked hemoglobin confirmed the preservation of the tetrameric structure of hemoglobin loaded on silica nanoparticles. Our results show that silica nanoparticles can act as an effector for human native and mutant hemoglobin. Manipulating hemoglobin oxygenation using nanoparticles opens the way to the design of novel HBOCs.

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