Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Massachusetts-Amherst , Amherst, Massachusetts 01003-9303, United States.
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, University of Massachusetts-Amherst , Amherst, Massachusetts 01003-9265, United States.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2018 Jan 24;10(3):2275-2281. doi: 10.1021/acsami.7b12145. Epub 2018 Jan 9.
Despite lacking visual, auditory, and olfactory perception, bacteria sense and attach to surfaces. Many factors, including the chemistry, topography, and mechanical properties of a surface, are known to alter bacterial attachment, and in this study, using a library of nine protein-resistant poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels immobilized on glass slides, we demonstrate that the thickness or amount of polymer concentration also matters. Hydrated atomic force microscopy and rheological measurements corroborated that thin (15 μm), medium (40 μm), and thick (150 μm) PEG hydrogels possessed Young's moduli in three distinct regimes, soft (20 kPa), intermediate (300 kPa), and stiff (1000 kPa). The attachment of two diverse bacteria, flagellated Gram-negative Escherichia coli and nonmotile Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus was assessed after a 24 h incubation on the nine PEG hydrogels. On the thickest PEG hydrogels (150 μm), E. coli and S. aureus attachment increased with increasing hydrogel stiffness. However, when the hydrogel's thickness was reduced to 15 μm, a substantially greater adhesion of E. coli and S. aureus was observed. Twelve times fewer S. aureus and eight times fewer E. coli adhered to thin-soft hydrogels than to thick-soft hydrogels. Although a full mechanism to explain this behavior is beyond the scope of this article, we suggest that because the Young's moduli of thin-soft and thick-soft hydrogels were statistically equivalent, potentially, the very stiff underlying glass slide was causing the thin-soft hydrogels to feel stiffer to the bacteria. These findings suggest a key takeaway design rule; to optimize fouling-resistance, hydrogel coatings should be thick and soft.
尽管缺乏视觉、听觉和嗅觉感知,细菌仍能感知并附着在表面上。许多因素,包括表面的化学性质、形貌和机械性能,都被认为会改变细菌的附着,在这项研究中,我们使用固定在玻璃载玻片上的九种蛋白质抗性聚乙二醇(PEG)水凝胶文库,证明了聚合物浓度的厚度或数量也很重要。水合原子力显微镜和流变学测量结果证实,薄(15μm)、中(40μm)和厚(150μm)PEG 水凝胶具有三个不同区域的杨氏模量,软(20kPa)、中(300kPa)和硬(1000kPa)。在九种 PEG 水凝胶上孵育 24 小时后,评估了两种不同细菌(鞭毛革兰氏阴性大肠杆菌和非运动性革兰氏阳性金黄色葡萄球菌)的附着情况。在最厚的 PEG 水凝胶(150μm)上,随着水凝胶硬度的增加,大肠杆菌和金黄色葡萄球菌的附着增加。然而,当水凝胶的厚度减小到 15μm 时,大肠杆菌和金黄色葡萄球菌的附着量显著增加。与厚软水凝胶相比,薄软水凝胶上的金黄色葡萄球菌和大肠杆菌粘附量分别减少了 12 倍和 8 倍。虽然解释这种行为的完整机制超出了本文的范围,但我们认为,由于薄软和厚软水凝胶的杨氏模量在统计学上是等效的,因此潜在地,非常硬的基底玻璃载玻片可能会使薄软水凝胶对细菌感觉更硬。这些发现表明了一个重要的设计规则;为了优化防污性能,水凝胶涂层应该又厚又软。