Attenuation of protein adsorption on static and oscillating magnetostrictive nanowires.

Nano Lett

Materials Research Institute, Department of Chemical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA.

Published: September 2005

The research described here investigates the hypothesis that nanoarchitecture contained in a nanowire array is capable of attenuating the adverse host response generated when medical devices are implanted in the body. This adverse host response, or biofouling, generates an avascular fibrous mass transfer barrier between the device and the analyte of interest, disabling the implant if it is a sensor. Numerous studies have indicated that surface chemistry and architecture modulate the host response. These findings led us to hypothesize that nanostructured surfaces will inhibit the formation of an avascular fibrous capsule significantly. We are investigating whether arrays of oscillating magnetostrictive nanowires can prevent protein adsorption. Magnetostrictive nanowires were fabricated by electroplating a ferromagnetic metal alloy into the pores of a nanoporous alumina template. The ferromagnetic nanowires are made to oscillate by oscillating the magnetic field surrounding the wires. Radiolabeled bovine serum albumin, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and other protein assays were used to study protein adhesion on the nanowire arrays. These results display a reduced protein adsorption per surface area of static nanowires. Comparing the surfaces, 14-30% of the protein that absorbed on the flat surface adsorbed on the nanowires. Our contact angle measurements indicate that the attenuation of protein on the nanowire surface might be due to the increased hydrophilicity of the nanostructured surface compared to a flat surface of the same material. We oscillated the magnetostrictive wires by placing them in a 38 G 10 Hz oscillating magnetic field. The oscillating nanowires show a further reduction in protein adhesion where only 7-67% of the protein on the static wires was measured on the oscillating nanowires. By varying the viscosity of the fluid the nanowires are oscillated in, we determined that protein detachment is shear-stress modulated. We created a high shearing fluid with dextran, which reduced protein adsorption on the oscillating nanowires by 70% over nanowires oscillating in baseline viscosity fluid. Our preliminary studies strongly suggest that the architecture in the static nanowire arrays and the shear created by oscillating the nanowire arrays would attenuate the biofouling response in vivo.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nl051117uDOI Listing

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