Bio-inert interfaces via biomimetic anchoring of a zwitterionic copolymer on versatile substrates.

J Colloid Interface Sci

R&D Center for Membrane Technology and Department of Chemical Engineering, Chung Yuan Christian University, Chung-Li, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan. Electronic address:

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Bio-inert biomaterials are essential for applications like biosensors and medical implants, requiring materials that are hydrophilic and electrically neutral.
  • This study introduced a new zwitterionic copolymer with a catechol group that can effectively coat different materials without being limited to a specific substrate.
  • The research determined the critical number of catechol groups needed for successful modification, achieving up to 95% reduction in non-specific biological interactions like protein and cell attachment when tested with human blood.

Article Abstract

Bio-inert biomaterial design is vital for fields like biosensors, medical implants, and drug delivery systems. Bio-inert materials are generally hydrophilic and electrical neutral. One limitation faced in the design of bio-inert materials is that most of the modifiers used are specific to their substrate. In this work, we synthesized a novel zwitterionic copolymer containing a catechol group, a non-substrate dependent biomimetic anchoring segment, that can form a stable coating on various materials. No previous study was conducted using a grafting-to approach and determined the critical amount of catechol groups needed to effectively modify a material. The synthesized copolymers of sulfobetaine acrylamide (SBAA) and dopamine methacrylamide (DMA) in this work contains varying numbers of catechol groups, in which the critical number of catechol groups that had effectively modified substrates to have the bio-inert property was determined. The bio-inert property and capability to do coating on versatile substrates were evaluated in contact with human blood by coating different material groups such as ceramic, metallic, and polymeric groups. The novel structure and the simple grafting-to approach provides bio-inert property on various materials, giving them non-specific adsorption and attachment of biomolecules such as plasma proteins, erythrocytes, thrombocytes, bacteria, and tissue cells (85-95% reduction).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2018.05.073DOI Listing

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