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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Oct 18.
Published in final edited form as: Mol Imaging Biol. 2020 Oct 23;23(1):1–10. doi: 10.1007/s11307-020-01559-9

Table 1:

A list of the most common analytical approaches, with their pros and cons, to probe the interactions between nanoparticles and biomolecules.

Analytical method Advantages Disadvantages
UV/vis cheap, fast, flexible, and simple; little sample preparation nature of the solvent, pH of the solution, temperature, high electrolyte concentrations, and presence of interfering substances can influence the absorption spectrum; experimental variations such as the slit width (effective bandwidth) of the spectrophotometer will also alter the spectrum; to apply UV/vis spectroscopy to analysis, these variables must be controlled or accounted for to identify the substances present
fluorescence spectroscopy sensitive unstable
FTIR quite cheap, versatile, easy to identify functional groups; sensitive to protein conformation; not constrained by substrate size or material sample characterization is not possible in complex media; cannot get fine structural detail; time-consuming sample preparation; sample preparation destroys the sample
Raman spectroscopy can be used with solids and liquids; no sample preparation needed; no interference from water; nondestructive; highly specific—like a chemical fingerprint of a material; Raman spectra are acquired quickly (within seconds); samples can be analyzed through glass or a polymer packaging; laser light and Raman scattered light can be transmitted by optical fibers over long distances for remote analysis; Raman spectra can be collected from a very small volume (<1 μm in diameter); inorganic materials are normally easily analyzed by Raman compard to infrared spectroscopy cannot be used for metals or alloys; Raman effect is very weak; detection needs a sensitive and highly optimized instrumentation; fluorescence of impurities or of the sample itself can hide the Raman spectrum; sample heating through the intense laser radiation can destroy the sample or cover the Raman spectrum
mass spectrometry high-resolution method for characterization of NP-bound proteins; unique technique to obtain protein identities expensive; requires dedicated facility and trained user
NMR spectroscopy can detect very fine structural components; works for organic and inorganic materials; qualitative and quantitative, versatile; it can be applied to a wide variety of samples for direct structural study and molecular dynamics studies, both in solution and in the solid state expensive, time-consuming; spectra take a long time to interpret
DLS nonperturbative, fast, and accurate, giving a measure of the vesicle hydrodynamic diameter as this dimension changes in solution hydrodynamic diameters are influenced by the formation of hydration shells, the shape of the particles, and counterion binding; requires a monodisperse population
CD monitoring conformational changes induced by protein-NP interaction inherent inconsistency problems in absolute secondary structure determination; CD signal reflects an average of the entire molecular population; CD measurements cannot provide information regarding local structural alterations at the level of individual amino acids
ITC can directly and quantitatively measure the binding affinity constant, enthalpy changes, and binding stoichiometry between NP and proteins in solution; no labeling or immobilization is required; not limited by the ligand or protein size; relatively artifact-free and not affected by the optical properties of the samples requires relatively high concentrations of samples
ζ potential straightforward method to measure surface charge and changes in surface charge; indicator of stability of NP dispersions requires a minimum ionic strength and that the NPs be monodisperse as calculates a charge/size ratio
chromatography very sensitive and reliable (provided that the method is carried out carefully without any contamination); complex mixtures can be separated accurately using only a few micrograms of sample; separation takes less time as compared to other techniques; the equipment setups are simple and easy since the method is very sensitive, improper setup or contamination, even in nanograms, will give different results; sample is generally very diluted afterward and requires reconcentration; time consuming
electrophoresis suitable for separation of complicated protein mixtures; suitable for qualitative and quantitative analysis proteins are easily adsorbed onto the inner surface of the capillary, and the detection sensitivity is not high
SPR sensitive to changes in the refractive index of the medium surrounding the sensor and to the thickness of the sensor layer; as any change in protein conformation will bring a modification in this parameter, SPR has also been extensively used to study the conformation of immobilized proteins in various environments sensitivity of the system with a detection limit restricted to 1–10 nM of a 20 kDa protein and even higher for smaller molecules, particularly when the receptor displays a weak affinity
QCM simple, cost-effective, high-resolution mass sensing technique; ease of setup and operation and low cost; QCMs are capable of measuring mass changes as small as a fraction of a monolayer or single layer of atoms; allows a label-free detection of molecules variations in interfacial parameters, such as surface roughness, surface free energy, surface charge, and viscoelasticity, hamper interpretation of QCM results

Copyright American Chemical Society 2011 [35]. Abbreviations: Fourier transform infrared (FTIR); nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR); dynamic light scattering (DLS); circular dichroism (CD), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), surface plasmon resonance (SPR), and quartz crystal microbalance (QCM).