Don't know if this has made the silver list, since it is a few years old...

Study Shows Silver Nanoparticles Attach to HIV-1 virus

In the first-ever study of metal nanoparticles' interaction with HIV-1,
silver nanoparticles of sizes 1-10nm attached to HIV-1 and prevented the
virus from bonding to host cells. 

The study, published in the Journal of Nanotechnology, was a joint project
between the University of Texas, Austin and Mexico Univeristy, Nuevo Leon. 

"Our article opens an important avenue for research," said Miguel Jose
Yacaman, from University of Texas, Department of Engineering and one of the
study's authors. 

In this study, scientists mixed silver nanoparticles with three different
capping agents: foamy carbon, poly (PVP), and bovine serum albumin
(BSA)."Not using a capping agent could result in the synthesis of big
crystals instead of nanocrystals," explained Yacaman.

Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed the silver nanoparticles in
the foamy carbon matrix were joined together, but an ultrasonic bath in
deionized water released a significant number of nanoparticles. These
nanoparticles were of size 16.19 (+-8.69)nm and had the greatest variety of
shapes, such as icosahedral, decahedral, and elongated. 

"Because of the synthesis procedure, the foamy carbon-coated naoparticles
are more likely to have broad shape distribution," said Yacaman. Scientists
used the electron beam to release the remainder of the nanoparticles from
the joined bundle. 

For the PVP-coated silver nanoparticles, scientists used glycerine as a
dissolving agent. These particles were of size 6.53 (+-2.41). In the third
preparation, scientists used serum albumin, the most common protein in
blood plasma. The sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen chemicals in BSA stabilized
the nanoparticles, which were in the range of 3.12 (+-2.00) nm.

Scientists studied the absorption spectra of the different preparations to
pinpoint their shapes. "Spherical nanoparticles absorbed in the blue region
of the spectrum, for example," Yacaman said. 

Also, the UV-Visible spectra graphs helped the group determine nanoparticle
sizes. "The surface plasmon resonance peak wavelength increased with size,"
explained Yacaman. 

Scientists tested, in vitro, each of three silver nanoparticle-preparations
in HIV-1 cells. Yacaman and his colleagues incubated the samples at 37 C.
After three hours and 24 hours, respectively, 0% of the cells were living.

The results showed that a silver nanoparticle concentration greater than 25
ug/mL worked more effectively at inhibiting HIV-1 cells. Plus, the foamy
carbon was a slightly-better capping agent because of its free surface
area. Size also played a role since none of the attached nanoparticles were
greater than 10nm.

Scientists think the nanoparticles bonded through the gp120 glycoprotein
knobs on HIV-1, using the sulfur residues on the knobs. The spacing between
the knobs of ~22nm matched the center-to-center nanoparticle spacing. 

Although this study shows silver nanoparticles may treat HIV-1, scientists
need to research this relationship further. "We lack information regarding
the long-term effects of metal nanoparticles," cautioned Yacaman.
Scientists are forming a preventive cream for HIV-1, which they will test
on humans.

Scientists are also studying other uses for silver nanoparticles. "We're
testing against other viruses and the 'super bug (Methicillin resistant
staphylococcus aureus).' Our preliminary results indicate that silver
nanoparticles can effectively attack other micro-organisms," Yacaman said.

By Syeda Z. Hamdani; Copyright 2005 PhysOrg.com




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