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Dive into the research topics where Karsten Kantner is active.

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Featured researches published by Karsten Kantner.


ACS Nano | 2013

Polymer-Coated Nanoparticles Interacting with Proteins and Cells: Focusing on the Sign of the Net Charge

Dominik Hühn; Karsten Kantner; Christian Geidel; Stefan Brandholt; Ine De Cock; Stefaan J. Soenen; Pilar Rivera Gil; Jose-Maria Montenegro; Kevin Braeckmans; Klaus Müllen; G. Ulrich Nienhaus; Markus Klapper; Wolfgang J. Parak

To study charge-dependent interactions of nanoparticles (NPs) with biological media and NP uptake by cells, colloidal gold nanoparticles were modified with amphiphilic polymers to obtain NPs with identical physical properties except for the sign of the charge (negative/positive). This strategy enabled us to solely assess the influence of charge on the interactions of the NPs with proteins and cells, without interference by other effects such as different size and colloidal stability. Our study shows that the number of adsorbed human serum albumin molecules per NP was not influenced by their surface charge. Positively charged NPs were incorporated by cells to a larger extent than negatively charged ones, both in serum-free and serum-containing media. Consequently, with and without protein corona (i.e., in serum-free medium) present, NP internalization depends on the sign of charge. The uptake rate of NPs by cells was higher for positively than for negatively charged NPs. Furthermore, cytotoxicity assays revealed a higher cytotoxicity for positively charged NPs, associated with their enhanced uptake.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

In vivo integrity of polymer-coated gold nanoparticles

Wolfgang G. Kreyling; Abuelmagd M. Abdelmonem; Zulqurnain Ali; Frauke Alves; Marianne Geiser; Nadine Haberl; Raimo Hartmann; Stephanie Hirn; Dorleta Jimenez de Aberasturi; Karsten Kantner; Gülnaz Khadem-Saba; Jose-Maria Montenegro; Joanna Rejman; Teófilo Rojo; Idoia Ruiz de Larramendi; Roser Ufartes; Alexander Wenk; Wolfgang J. Parak

Inorganic nanoparticles are frequently engineered with an organic surface coating to improve their physicochemical properties, and it is well known that their colloidal properties may change upon internalization by cells. While the stability of such nanoparticles is typically assayed in simple in vitro tests, their stability in a mammalian organism remains unknown. Here, we show that firmly grafted polymer shells around gold nanoparticles may degrade when injected into rats. We synthesized monodisperse radioactively labelled gold nanoparticles ((198)Au) and engineered an (111)In-labelled polymer shell around them. Upon intravenous injection into rats, quantitative biodistribution analyses performed independently for (198)Au and (111)In showed partial removal of the polymer shell in vivo. While (198)Au accumulates mostly in the liver, part of the (111)In shows a non-particulate biodistribution similar to intravenous injection of chelated (111)In. Further in vitro studies suggest that degradation of the polymer shell is caused by proteolytic enzymes in the liver. Our results show that even nanoparticles with high colloidal stability can change their physicochemical properties in vivo.


Nature Communications | 2016

Tumour homing and therapeutic effect of colloidal nanoparticles depend on the number of attached antibodies

Miriam Colombo; Luisa Fiandra; Giulia Alessio; Serena Mazzucchelli; Manuela Nebuloni; Clara De Palma; Karsten Kantner; Beatriz Pelaz; Rany Rotem; Fabio Corsi; Wolfgang J. Parak; Davide Prosperi

Active targeting of nanoparticles to tumours can be achieved by conjugation with specific antibodies. Specific active targeting of the HER2 receptor is demonstrated in vitro and in vivo with a subcutaneous MCF-7 breast cancer mouse model with trastuzumab-functionalized gold nanoparticles. The number of attached antibodies per nanoparticle was precisely controlled in a way that each nanoparticle was conjugated with either exactly one or exactly two antibodies. As expected, in vitro we found a moderate increase in targeting efficiency of nanoparticles with two instead of just one antibody attached per nanoparticle. However, the in vivo data demonstrate that best effect is obtained for nanoparticles with only exactly one antibody. There is indication that this is based on a size-related effect. These results highlight the importance of precisely controlling the ligand density on the nanoparticle surface for optimizing active targeting, and that less antibodies can exhibit more effect.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Basic Physicochemical Properties of Polyethylene Glycol Coated Gold Nanoparticles that Determine Their Interaction with Cells

Pablo del Pino; Fang Yang; Beatriz Pelaz; Qian Zhang; Karsten Kantner; Raimo Hartmann; Natalia Martinez de Baroja; Marta Gallego; Marco Möller; Bella Manshian; Stefaan Soenen; René Riedel; Norbert Hampp; Wolfgang J. Parak

A homologous nanoparticle library was synthesized in which gold nanoparticles were coated with polyethylene glycol, whereby the diameter of the gold cores, as well as the thickness of the shell of polyethylene glycol, was varied. Basic physicochemical parameters of this two-dimensional nanoparticle library, such as size, ζ-potential, hydrophilicity, elasticity, and catalytic activity ,were determined. Cell uptake of selected nanoparticles with equal size yet varying thickness of the polymer shell and their effect on basic structural and functional cell parameters was determined. Data indicates that thinner, more hydrophilic coatings, combined with the partial functionalization with quaternary ammonium cations, result in a more efficient uptake, which relates to significant effects on structural and functional cell parameters.


Small | 2015

Particle-Based Optical Sensing of Intracellular Ions at the Example of Calcium - What Are the Experimental Pitfalls?

Karsten Kantner; Sumaira Ashraf; Susana Carregal-Romero; Carolina Carrillo-Carrión; Mayeul Collot; P. del Pino; Wolfram Heimbrodt; D. J. De Aberasturi; Uwe Kaiser; L. I. Kazakova; Marco Lelle; N. M. de Baroja; Jose-Maria Montenegro; Moritz Nazarenus; Beatriz Pelaz; Kalina Peneva; Pilar Rivera Gil; Nadeem Sabir; L. M. Schneider; Lyudmila I. Shabarchina; Gleb B. Sukhorukov; M. Vazquez; Fang Yang; Wolfgang J. Parak

Colloidal particles with fluorescence read-out are commonly used as sensors for the quantitative determination of ions. Calcium, for example, is a biologically highly relevant ion in signaling, and thus knowledge of its spatio-temporal distribution inside cells would offer important experimental data. However, the use of particle-based intracellular sensors for ion detection is not straightforward. Important associated problems involve delivery and intracellular location of particle-based fluorophores, crosstalk of the fluorescence read-out with pH, and spectral overlap of the emission spectra of different fluorophores. These potential problems are outlined and discussed here with selected experimental examples. Potential solutions are discussed and form a guideline for particle-based intracellular imaging of ions.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2015

Charge and agglomeration dependent in vitro uptake and cytotoxicity of zinc oxide nanoparticles

Abuelmagd M. Abdelmonem; Beatriz Pelaz; Karsten Kantner; Nadja C. Bigall; Pablo del Pino; Wolfgang J. Parak

The influence of the surface charge and the state of agglomeration of ZnO nanoparticles on cellular uptake and viability are investigated. For this purpose, ZnO nanoparticles were synthesized by colloidal routes and their physicochemical properties were investigated in detail. Three different surface modifications were investigated, involving coatings with the amphiphilic polymer poly(isobutylene-alt-maleic anhydride)-graft-dodecyl, mercaptoundecanoic acid, and L-arginine, which provide the nanoparticles with either a negative or a positive zeta-potential. The hydrodynamic diameters and zeta-potentials of all three nanoparticle species were investigated at different pH values and NaCl concentrations by means of dynamic light scattering and laser Doppler anemometry, respectively. The three differently modified ZnO nanoparticle species of similar sizes were also investigated in respect to their cellular uptake by 3T3 fibroblasts and HeLa cells, and their effect on cell viability.


Small | 2016

Influence of Temperature on the Colloidal Stability of Polymer-Coated Gold Nanoparticles in Cell Culture Media.

Mikhail V. Zyuzin; Tobias Honold; Susana Carregal-Romero; Karsten Kantner; Matthias Karg; Wolfgang J. Parak

The temperature-dependence of the hydrodynamic diameter and colloidal stability of gold-polymer core-shell particles with temperature-sensitive (poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)) and temperature-insensitive shells (polyallylaminine hydrochloride/polystyrensulfonate, poly(isobutylene-alt-maleic anhydride)-graft-dodecyl) are investigated in various aqueous media. The data demonstrate that for all nanoparticle agglomeration, i.e., increase in effective nanoparticle size, the presence of salts or proteins in the dispersion media has to be taken into account. Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) coated nanoparticles show a reversible temperature-dependent increase in size above the volume phase transition of the polymer shell when they are dispersed in phosphate buffered saline or in media containing protein. In contrast, the nanoparticles coated with temperature-insensitive polymers show a time-dependent increase in size in phosphate buffered saline or in medium containing protein. This is due to time-dependent agglomeration, which is particularly strong in phosphate buffered saline, and induces a time-dependent, irreversible increase in the hydrodynamic diameter of the nanoparticles. This demonstrates that one has to distinguish between temperature- and time-induced agglomerations. Since the size of nanoparticles regulates their uptake by cells, temperature-dependent uptake of thermosensitive and non-thermosensitive nanoparticles by cells lines is compared. No temperature-specific difference between both types of nanoparticles could be observed.


Nanoscale | 2016

Zwitterionic surface coating of quantum dots reduces protein adsorption and cellular uptake.

Sumaira Ashraf; Joonhyuck Park; Mathilde A. Bichelberger; Karsten Kantner; Raimo Hartmann; Pauline Maffre; Alaa Hassan Said; Neus Feliu; Junhwa Lee; Dakyeon Lee; Gerd Ulrich Nienhaus; Sungjee Kim; Wolfgang J. Parak

We have studied the effect of the zwitterionic surface coating of quantum dots (QDs) on their interaction with a serum supplemented cell medium and their internalization by human cervical carcinoma (HeLa) cells. Zwitterionic QDs showed negligible adsorption of human serum albumin (HSA) selected as a model serum protein, in contrast to similar but negatively charged QDs. The incorporation of zwitterionic QDs by HeLa cells was found to be lower than for negatively charged QDs and for positively charged QDs, for which the uptake yield was largest. Our results suggest that the suppression of protein adsorption, here accomplished by zwitterionic QD surfaces, offers a strategy that allows for reducing the cellular uptake of nanoparticles.


ACS Nano | 2017

Influence of size and shape on the anatomical distribution of endotoxin-free gold nanoparticles

Laura Talamini; Martina Bruna Violatto; Qi Cai; Marco P. Monopoli; Karsten Kantner; Željka Krpetić; André Perez-Potti; Jennifer Cookman; David Garry; Camila P. Silveira; Luca Boselli; Beatriz Pelaz; Tommaso Serchi; Sébastien Cambier; Arno C. Gutleb; Neus Feliu; Yan Yan; Mario Salmona; Wolfgang J. Parak; Kenneth A. Dawson; Paolo Bigini

The transport and the delivery of drugs through nanocarriers is a great challenge of pharmacology. Since the production of liposomes to reduce the toxicity of doxorubicin in patients, a plethora of nanomaterials have been produced and characterized. Although it is widely known that elementary properties of nanomaterials influence their in vivo kinetics, such interaction is often poorly investigated in many preclinical studies. The present study aims to evaluate the actual effect of size and shape on the biodistribution of a set of gold nanoparticles (GNPs) after intravenous administration in mice. To this goal, quantitative data achieved by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and observational results emerging from histochemistry (autometallography and enhanced dark-field hyperspectral microscopy) were combined. Since the immune system plays a role in bionano-interaction we used healthy immune-competent mice. To keep the immune surveillance on the physiological levels we synthesized endotoxin-free GNPs to be tested in specific pathogen-free animals. Our study mainly reveals that (a) the size and the shape greatly influence the kinetics of accumulation and excretion of GNPs in filter organs; (b) spherical and star-like GNPs showed the same percentage of accumulation, but a different localization in liver; (c) only star-like GNPs are able to accumulate in lung; (d) changes in the geometry did not improve the passage of the blood brain barrier. Overall, this study can be considered as a reliable starting point to drive the synthesis and the functionalization of potential candidates for theranostic purposes in many fields of research.


Nanomaterials | 2015

Comparison of the in Vitro Uptake and Toxicity of Collagen- and Synthetic Polymer-Coated Gold Nanoparticles

Oana T. Marişca; Karsten Kantner; Christian Pfeiffer; Qian Zhang; Beatriz Pelaz; Nicolae Leopold; Wolfgang J. Parak; Joanna Rejman

We studied the physico-chemical properties (size, shape, zeta-potential), cellular internalization and toxicity of gold nanoparticles (NPs) stabilized with the most abundant mammalian protein, collagen. The properties of these gold NPs were compared to the same sized gold NPs coated with synthetic poly(isobutylene-alt-maleic anhydride) (PMA). Intracellular uptake and cytotoxicity were assessed in two cell lines (cervical carcinoma and lung adenocarcinoma cells) by employing inductively-coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis and a cell viability assay based on 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT), respectively. We found that the collagen-coated gold NPs exhibit lower cytotoxicity, but higher uptake levels than PMA-coated gold NPs. These results demonstrate that the surface coating of Au NPs plays a decisive role in their biocompatibility.

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