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Nonfouling hydrogels formed from charged monomer subunits. | LitMetric

Nonfouling hydrogels formed from charged monomer subunits.

J Phys Chem B

Departments of Chemical Engineering, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA.

Published: December 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the challenge of protein adsorption on biomedical implants by exploring nonfouling hydrogels made from a balanced mixture of positively and negatively charged monomers.
  • The research details the creation and characterization of these hydrogels, focusing on their swelling, water content, surface charge, and compressional strength.
  • Results show that the hydrogels effectively resist protein attachment, similar to existing nonfouling materials, but indicate potential for improvement in their nonfouling properties through further composition adjustments.

Article Abstract

A critical challenge in the field of biomaterials is the often undesirable, but immediate, coating of implants with nonspecifically adsorbed proteins upon contact with bodily fluids. Prior research has shown that overall neutral materials containing a homologous arrangement of mixed charges exhibit nonfouling properties. This has been widely demonstrated for zwitterionic materials and more recently for coatings containing an equimolar mixture of positively and negatively charged monomer subunits. In this investigation it is demonstrated that nonfouling hydrogels can be formed through this approach, and the physical properties of the resulting materials are thoroughly characterized. In particular, hydrogels were formed from mixtures of [2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl]trimethylammonium chloride (TM) and 3-sulfopropyl methacrylate potassium salt (SA) monomers with varying concentrations of a triethylene glycol dimethacrylate (TEGDMA) cross-linker. The swelling, weight percentage water, surface zeta potential, and compressional properties of the gels were characterized, and the nonfouling properties were demonstrated using enzyme-linked immunosorbant assays for both negatively charged fibrinogen and positively charged lysozyme. The results confirm that the TM:SA hydrogel systems have nonfouling properties that are equivalent to established nonfouling controls. Additionally, even though the gels were resistant to nonspecific protein adsorption, a composition analysis suggests that there is room to further improve the nonfouling performance because there is a slight enrichment of the SA monomer relative to the TM monomer.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp307588bDOI Listing

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