Impacts of polyethylene glycol (PEG) dispersity on protein adsorption, pharmacokinetics, and biodistribution of PEGylated gold nanoparticles†
Abstract
PEGylated gold nanoparticles (PEG-AuNPs) are widely used in drug delivery, imaging and diagnostics, therapeutics, and biosensing. However, the effect of PEG dispersity on the molecular weight (MW) distribution of PEG grafted onto AuNP surfaces has been rarely reported. This study investigates the effect of PEG dispersity on the MW distribution of PEG grafted onto AuNP surfaces and its subsequent impact on protein adsorption and pharmacokinetics, by modifying AuNPs with monodisperse PEG methyl ether thiols (mPEGn-HS, n = 36, 45) and traditional polydisperse mPEG2k-SH (MW = 1900). Polydisperse PEG-AuNPs favor the enrichment of lower MW PEG fractions on their surface due to the steric hindrance effect, which leads to increased protein adsorption. In contrast, monodisperse PEG-AuNPs have a uniform length of PEG outlayer, exhibiting markedly lower yet constant protein adsorption. Pharmacokinetics analysis in tumor-bearing mice demonstrated that monodisperse PEG-AuNPs possess a significantly prolonged blood circulation half-life and enhanced tumor accumulation compared with their polydisperse counterpart. These findings underscore the critical, yet often underestimated, impacts of PEG dispersity on the in vitro and in vivo behavior of PEG-AuNPs, highlighting the role of monodisperse PEG in enhancing therapeutic nanoparticle performance.