Roach Paul, Farrar David, Perry Carole C
Division of Chemistry, Interdisciplinary Biomedical Research Centre, School of Biomedical and Natural Sciences, Nottingham Trent University, Clifton, Nottingham, NG11 8NS, UK.
J Am Chem Soc. 2005 Jun 8;127(22):8168-73. doi: 10.1021/ja042898o.
Protein adhesion plays a major role in determining the biocompatibility of materials. The first stage of implant integration is the adhesion of protein followed by cell attachment. Surface modification of implants (surface chemistry and topography) to induce and control protein and cell adhesion is currently of great interest. This communication presents data on protein adsorption (bovine serum albumin and fibrinogen) onto model hydrophobic (CH(3)) and hydrophilic (OH) surfaces, investigated using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) and grazing angle infrared spectroscopy. Our data suggest that albumin undergoes adsorption via a single step whereas fibrinogen adsorption is a more complex, multistage process. Albumin has a stronger affinity toward the CH(3) compared to OH terminated surface. In contrast, fibrinogen adheres more rapidly to both surfaces, having a slightly higher affinity toward the hydrophobic surface. Conformational assessment of the adsorbed proteins by grazing angle infrared spectroscopy (GA-FTIR) shows that after an initial 1 h incubation few further time-dependent changes are observed. Both proteins exhibited a less organized secondary structure upon adsorption onto a hydrophobic surface than onto a hydrophilic surface, with the effect observed greatest for albumin. This study demonstrates the ability of simple tailor-made monochemical surfaces to influence binding rates and conformation of bound proteins through protein-surface interactions. Current interest in biocompatible materials has focused on surface modifications to induce rapid healing, both of implants and for wound care products. This effect may also be of significance at the next stage of implant integration, as cell adhesion occurs through the surface protein layer.
蛋白质黏附在决定材料的生物相容性方面起着主要作用。植入物整合的第一阶段是蛋白质的黏附,随后是细胞附着。目前,通过对植入物进行表面改性(表面化学和形貌)来诱导和控制蛋白质及细胞黏附备受关注。本文介绍了使用石英晶体微天平(QCM)和掠角红外光谱研究牛血清白蛋白和纤维蛋白原在模型疏水(CH(3))和亲水(OH)表面上的蛋白质吸附数据。我们的数据表明,白蛋白通过单一步骤进行吸附,而纤维蛋白原的吸附是一个更复杂的多阶段过程。与OH端基表面相比,白蛋白对CH(3)表面具有更强的亲和力。相比之下,纤维蛋白原在两个表面上的黏附都更快,对疏水表面的亲和力略高。通过掠角红外光谱(GA-FTIR)对吸附蛋白质的构象评估表明,在最初孵育1小时后,未观察到进一步的时间依赖性变化。两种蛋白质吸附到疏水表面上时,其二级结构比吸附到亲水表面上时更无序,白蛋白的这种效应最为明显。本研究表明,简单定制的单化学表面能够通过蛋白质-表面相互作用影响结合速率和结合蛋白质的构象。目前对生物相容性材料的关注集中在表面改性上,以促进植入物和伤口护理产品的快速愈合。这种效应在植入物整合的下一阶段可能也很重要,因为细胞通过表面蛋白质层发生黏附。