A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution

2016
Authors
Dojčilović, Radovan
Pajović, Jelena D.

Božanić, Dušan K.

Vodnik, Vesna

Dimitrijević-Branković, Suzana

Milosavljević, Aleksandar R.

Kascakova, Slavka
Refregiers, Matthieu

Đoković, Vladimir

Article (Published version)

Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The investigation of the interaction of silver nanoparticles and live bacteria cells is of particular importance for understanding and controlling their bactericidal properties. In this study, the process of internalization of silver nanoparticles in Escherichia coli cells was followed by means of synchrotron excitation deep ultraviolet (DUV) fluorescence imaging. Antimicrobial nanostructures that can absorb and emit light in the UV region were prepared by functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan amino acid and used as environmentally sensitive fluorescent probes. The nanostructures were characterized by morphological (TEM) and spectroscopic methods (UV-vis, FTIR, XPS, and photoluminescence). The TEM images and the analyses of the UV-vis spectra suggested that the addition of tryptophan led to the formation of hybrid nanostructures with pronounced eccentricity and larger sizes with respect to that of the initial silver nanoparticles. The DUV imaging showed that it was ...possible to distinguish the fluorescent signal pertaining to silver-tryptophan nanostructures from the autofluorescence of the bacteria. The spatial resolution of the fluorescence images was 154 nm which was sufficient to perform analyses of the accumulation of the nanostructures within a single bacterium. The DUV imaging results imply that the tryptophan-functionalized silver nanoparticles interact with cell membranes via insertion of the amino acid into the phospholipid bilayer and enter the cells.
Source:
Analyst, 2016, 141, 6, 1988-1996Publisher:
- Royal Soc Chemistry, Cambridge
Funding / projects:
- DISCO beamline of Synchrotron SOLEIL (France) [20120810]
- Size-, shape- and structure- dependent properties of nanoparticles and nanocomposites (RS-172056)
- Materials of Reduced Dimensions for Efficient Light Harvesting and Energy conversion (RS-45020)
- Physics of collisions and photo processes in atomic, (bio)molecular and nanosized systems (RS-171020)
DOI: 10.1039/c5an02358k
ISSN: 0003-2654
PubMed: 26858997
WoS: 000372259100015
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84960371943
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Dojčilović, Radovan AU - Pajović, Jelena D. AU - Božanić, Dušan K. AU - Vodnik, Vesna AU - Dimitrijević-Branković, Suzana AU - Milosavljević, Aleksandar R. AU - Kascakova, Slavka AU - Refregiers, Matthieu AU - Đoković, Vladimir PY - 2016 UR - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3454 AB - The investigation of the interaction of silver nanoparticles and live bacteria cells is of particular importance for understanding and controlling their bactericidal properties. In this study, the process of internalization of silver nanoparticles in Escherichia coli cells was followed by means of synchrotron excitation deep ultraviolet (DUV) fluorescence imaging. Antimicrobial nanostructures that can absorb and emit light in the UV region were prepared by functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan amino acid and used as environmentally sensitive fluorescent probes. The nanostructures were characterized by morphological (TEM) and spectroscopic methods (UV-vis, FTIR, XPS, and photoluminescence). The TEM images and the analyses of the UV-vis spectra suggested that the addition of tryptophan led to the formation of hybrid nanostructures with pronounced eccentricity and larger sizes with respect to that of the initial silver nanoparticles. The DUV imaging showed that it was possible to distinguish the fluorescent signal pertaining to silver-tryptophan nanostructures from the autofluorescence of the bacteria. The spatial resolution of the fluorescence images was 154 nm which was sufficient to perform analyses of the accumulation of the nanostructures within a single bacterium. The DUV imaging results imply that the tryptophan-functionalized silver nanoparticles interact with cell membranes via insertion of the amino acid into the phospholipid bilayer and enter the cells. PB - Royal Soc Chemistry, Cambridge T2 - Analyst T1 - A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution EP - 1996 IS - 6 SP - 1988 VL - 141 DO - 10.1039/c5an02358k ER -
@article{ author = "Dojčilović, Radovan and Pajović, Jelena D. and Božanić, Dušan K. and Vodnik, Vesna and Dimitrijević-Branković, Suzana and Milosavljević, Aleksandar R. and Kascakova, Slavka and Refregiers, Matthieu and Đoković, Vladimir", year = "2016", abstract = "The investigation of the interaction of silver nanoparticles and live bacteria cells is of particular importance for understanding and controlling their bactericidal properties. In this study, the process of internalization of silver nanoparticles in Escherichia coli cells was followed by means of synchrotron excitation deep ultraviolet (DUV) fluorescence imaging. Antimicrobial nanostructures that can absorb and emit light in the UV region were prepared by functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan amino acid and used as environmentally sensitive fluorescent probes. The nanostructures were characterized by morphological (TEM) and spectroscopic methods (UV-vis, FTIR, XPS, and photoluminescence). The TEM images and the analyses of the UV-vis spectra suggested that the addition of tryptophan led to the formation of hybrid nanostructures with pronounced eccentricity and larger sizes with respect to that of the initial silver nanoparticles. The DUV imaging showed that it was possible to distinguish the fluorescent signal pertaining to silver-tryptophan nanostructures from the autofluorescence of the bacteria. The spatial resolution of the fluorescence images was 154 nm which was sufficient to perform analyses of the accumulation of the nanostructures within a single bacterium. The DUV imaging results imply that the tryptophan-functionalized silver nanoparticles interact with cell membranes via insertion of the amino acid into the phospholipid bilayer and enter the cells.", publisher = "Royal Soc Chemistry, Cambridge", journal = "Analyst", title = "A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution", pages = "1996-1988", number = "6", volume = "141", doi = "10.1039/c5an02358k" }
Dojčilović, R., Pajović, J. D., Božanić, D. K., Vodnik, V., Dimitrijević-Branković, S., Milosavljević, A. R., Kascakova, S., Refregiers, M.,& Đoković, V.. (2016). A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution. in Analyst Royal Soc Chemistry, Cambridge., 141(6), 1988-1996. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5an02358k
Dojčilović R, Pajović JD, Božanić DK, Vodnik V, Dimitrijević-Branković S, Milosavljević AR, Kascakova S, Refregiers M, Đoković V. A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution. in Analyst. 2016;141(6):1988-1996. doi:10.1039/c5an02358k .
Dojčilović, Radovan, Pajović, Jelena D., Božanić, Dušan K., Vodnik, Vesna, Dimitrijević-Branković, Suzana, Milosavljević, Aleksandar R., Kascakova, Slavka, Refregiers, Matthieu, Đoković, Vladimir, "A fluorescent nanoprobe for single bacterium tracking: functionalization of silver nanoparticles with tryptophan to probe the nanoparticle accumulation with single cell resolution" in Analyst, 141, no. 6 (2016):1988-1996, https://doi.org/10.1039/c5an02358k . .