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1.
The complex mechanisms of protein adsorption at the solid-liquid interface is of great importance in many research areas, including protein purification, biocompatibility of medical implants, biosensing, and biofouling. The protein adsorption process depends crucially on both the nanoscale chemistry and topography of the interface. Here, we investigate the adsorption of the cell-binding protein fibronectin on flat and nanometer scale rough tantalum oxide surfaces using ellipsometry and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D). On the flat tantalum oxide surfaces, the interfacial protein spreading causes an increase in the rigidity and a decrease in the thickness of the adsorbed fibronectin layer with decreasing bulk protein concentration. For the tantalum oxide surfaces with well-controlled, stochastic nanometer scale roughness, similar concentration effects are observed for the rigidity of the fibronectin layer and saturated fibronectin uptake. However, we find that the nanorough tantalum oxide surfaces promote additional protein conformational changes, an effect especially apparent from the QCM-D signals, interpreted as an additional stiffening of the formed fibronectin layers.  相似文献   

2.
Removing adsorbed protein from metals has significant health and industrial consequences. There are numerous protein-adsorption studies using model self-assembled monolayers or polymeric substrates but hardly any high-resolution measurements of adsorption and removal of proteins on industrially relevant transition metals. Surgeons and ship owners desire clean metal surfaces to reduce transmission of disease via surgical instruments and minimize surface fouling (to reduce friction and corrosion), respectively. A major finding of this work is that, besides hydrophobic interaction adhesion energy, water content in an adsorbed protein layer and secondary structure of proteins determined the access and hence ability to remove adsorbed proteins from metal surfaces with a strong alkaline-surfactant solution (NaOH and 5 mg/mL SDS in PBS at pH 11). This is demonstrated with three blood proteins (bovine serum albumin, immunoglobulin, and fibrinogen) and four transition metal substrates and stainless steel (platinum (Pt), gold (Au), tungsten (W), titanium (Ti), and 316 grade stainless steel (SS)). All the metallic substrates were checked for chemical contaminations like carbon and sulfur and were characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). While Pt and Au surfaces were oxide-free (fairly inert elements), W, Ti, and SS substrates were associated with native oxide. Difference measurements between a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) and surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy (SPR) provided a measure of the water content in the protein-adsorbed layers. Hydrophobic adhesion forces, obtained with atomic force microscopy, between the proteins and the metals correlated with the amount of the adsorbed protein-water complex. Thus, the amount of protein adsorbed decreased with Pt, Au, W, Ti and SS, in this order. Neither sessile contact angle nor surface roughness of the metal substrates was useful as predictors here. All three globular proteins behaved similarly on addition of the alkaline-surfactant cleaning solution, in that platinum and gold exhibited an increase, while tungsten, titanium, and stainless steel showed a decrease in weight. According to dissipation measurements with the QCM-D, the adsorbed layer for platinum and gold was rigid, while that for the tungsten, titanium, and stainless steel was much more flexible. The removal efficiency of adsorbed-protein by alkaline solution of SDS depended on the water content of the adsorbed layers for W, Ti, and SS, while for Pt and Au, it depended on secondary structural content. When protein adsorption was high (Pt, Au), protein-protein interactions and protein-surface interactions were dominant and the removal of protein layers was limited. Water content of the adsorbed protein layer was the determining factor for how efficiently the layer was removed by alkaline SDS when protein adsorption was low. Hence, protein-protein and protein-surface interactions were minimal and protein structure was less perturbed in comparison with those for high protein adsorption. Secondary structural content determined the efficient removal of adsorbed protein for high adsorbed amount.  相似文献   

3.
Adsorption of albumin and IgG to porous and smooth titanium   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The possibility to load submicrometer porous titanium surfaces with relatively small proteins, albumin and immunoglobulin G (IgG) was investigated. The loading ability is of interest due to the possibility of slow release of molecules from biomaterial surfaces, and may be important for the manipulation of wound healing around prostheses. Iodine-125 (125I) labeled albumin and IgG were adsorbed onto smooth and to porous titanium with a pore diameter of 200-300 nm. The smooth and porous surfaces were divided into three groups: hydrophilic, hydrophobic, or to amine-terminated silane (3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane) that bound proteins via glutaraldehyde. The protein solution pH and protein concentrations were varied, and the adsorption experiments made without or in the presence of calcium and magnesium ions. The adsorbed amounts were quantified with a gamma counter. Two to eleven times more proteins adsorbed onto porous than smooth surfaces and the adsorbed amounts increased with increasing protein concentration (0.1-10 mg/ml) during a constant incubation time. The elutability by sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) was incomplete on porous surfaces.  相似文献   

4.
Staphylococcus aureus adhesion on self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) formed by the adsorption of alkanethiols on transparent gold films has been studied in real time under well-defined flow conditions using a radial flow chamber and an automated videomicroscopy system. SAMs terminated with methyl, hydroxyl, carboxylic acid and tri(ethylene oxide) groups were investigated. SAMs were characterized using contact angle measurements, ellipsometry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Adhesion experiments using the Newman strain of S. aureus were performed on bare monolayers and monolayers pre-incubated with fibrinogen. Adhesion was found to be lowest on the ethylene oxide-bearing surfaces, followed by the hydroxyl surfaces. Adhesion on the carboxylic- and methyl-terminated SAMs was much higher. Bacterial adhesion was higher on the hydrophobic surfaces. Pre-incubation of surfaces with fibrinogen minimized the effect of the surface properties of the substrate. Adhesion was increased on all surfaces when fibrinogen was present and no significant differences were observed between adhesion to the different SAMs. This study showed that surfaces rich in ethylene oxide groups can be effectively used to prevent bacterial adhesion. However, under physiological conditions, most of the substrate properties are masked by the presence of the adsorbed protein layer and the effect of substrate properties on bacteria adhesion under flow is minimal.  相似文献   

5.
To investigate the influence of titanium films with nanometre scale topography on protein adsorption and cell growth, three different model titanium films were utilized in the present study. The chemical compositions, surface topographies and wettability were investigated by using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), atomic force microscopy (AFM) and water contact angle measurement, respectively. The films share the same surface chemistry but exhibit different topographies on a nanometre scale. Thus, they act as model systems for biological studies regarding surface topography effects. The films were obtained by varying the deposition rate and the film thickness, respectively. These films displayed nanometre scale surface roughness (root mean square roughness, Rrms) from 2 to 21 nm over areas of 50 μm × 50 μm, with different grain sizes at their surfaces. Albumin and fibrinogen adsorption on these model titanium films were performed in this study. Bicinchoninic acid assay was employed to determine the amount of adsorbed protein on titanium film surfaces. No statistically significant differences, however, were observed for either albumin or fibrinogen adsorption between the different groups of titanium films. No statistically significant influence of surface roughness on osteoblast proliferation and cell viability was detected in the present study.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of a series of amphiphilic diblock copolymers of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and poly(DL-lactide) (PL) at hydrophobized silica from aqueous solution was studied using time-resolved ellipsometry and reflectometry. The adsorbed amounts only display a weak dependence on the copolymer composition in both water and phosphate-buffered solution. For the short copolymers, the layer thickness decreases slightly with increasing length of the hydrophobic block. Furthermore, in comparison with the short copolymers, the layer thickness of the long copolymers is substantially higher. Upon degradation of the PL block, the adsorbed amount is found to decrease and approach that of the corresponding PEO homopolymer. Protein rejection studies indicate that the adsorption of fibrinogen is inhibited by copolymer preadsorption. The protein rejection is enhanced with increasing surface coverage of the preadsorbed copolymer, but largely independent of the length of the PL block and the PEO block. For all polymers investigated, essentially complete protein rejection is obtained above a critical surface coverage that is significantly lower than the saturation coverage of the copolymers. Removing the copolymer from bulk solution after preadsorption causes a partial desorption, resulting in reduced protein rejection. However, the protein rejection capacity with and without copolymer in the bulk solution is found to be similar at a given surface coverage. Contrary to the behavior of the intact copolymers, fibrinogen adsorption is found to be significant at surfaces pretreated with an extensively degraded copolymer and, in fact, quantitatively comparable to that at the hydrophobic surface in the absence of preadsorption. This finding, together with that of the effect of the copolymer composition on protein rejection, suggests that an efficient protein rejection is maintained until only a few L units remain in the copolymer, i.e., until nearly completed degradation. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.  相似文献   

7.
The adsorption of fibronectin on a series of different surfaces was investigated with in situ ellipsometry. For silica and methylated silica, the adsorbed amount (Γ), the adsorbed layer thickness (δel) and the mean adsorbed layer refractive index (nf) were obtained by a procedure involving studies of the bare substrate at two different ambient refractive indices, as well as four-zone averaging. It was found that the adsorbed amount of fibronectin was the same (1.9 ± 0.1 mg m−2) on both silica and methylated silica surfaces. However, the adsorbed layers formed on methylated silica were more extended and had a lower average protein concentration than those formed on silica. Furthermore, on both silica and methylated silica, an increasing adsorbed amount is achieved both by a denser packing of the fibronectin molecules and by a growth of the adsorbed layer normal to the surface. Furthermore, the adsorption of fibronectin on lipid surfaces was investigated. It was found that the adsorption of fibronectin on phosphatidic acid was quite significant (2.2 ± 0.2 mg m−2), while that on phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine was much smaller (all 0.1 ± 0.05 mg m−2). These results are correlated to findings on the adsorption of fibrinogen on these surfaces, as well as on the opsonization of lipid-stabilized colloidal particles.  相似文献   

8.
Infrared-visible sum frequency generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy, in combination with fluorescence microscopy, was employed to investigate the surface structure of lysozyme, fibrinogen, and bovine serum albumin (BSA) adsorbed on hydrophilic silica and hydrophobic polystyrene as a function of protein concentration. Fluorescence microscopy shows that the relative amounts of protein adsorbed on hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces increase in proportion with the concentration of protein solutions. For a given bulk protein concentration, a larger amount of protein is adsorbed on hydrophobic polystyrene surfaces compared to hydrophilic silica surfaces. While lysozyme molecules adsorbed on silica surfaces yield relatively similar SFG spectra, regardless of the surface concentration, SFG spectra of fibrinogen and BSA adsorbed on silica surfaces exhibit concentration-dependent signal intensities and peak shapes. Quantitative SFG data analysis reveals that methyl groups in lysozyme adsorbed on hydrophilic surfaces show a concentration-independent orientation. However, methyl groups in BSA and fibrinogen become less tilted with respect to the surface normal with increasing protein concentration at the surface. On hydrophobic polystyrene surfaces, all proteins yield similar SFG spectra, which are different from those on hydrophilic surfaces. Although more protein molecules are present on hydrophobic surfaces, lower SFG signal intensity is observed, indicating that methyl groups in adsorbed proteins are more randomly oriented as compared to those on hydrophilic surfaces. SFG data also shows that the orientation and ordering of phenyl rings in the polystyrene surface is affected by protein adsorption, depending on the amount and type of proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption kinetics and dodeceyltrimethylammonium bromide-mediated elution of the wild type and two structural stability mutants of bacteriophage T4 lysozyme were recorded in situ, at silica surfaces. Experiments were performed at different solution concentrations, ranging from 0.01 to 1.0 mg/ml. Plateau values of adsorbed mass generally increased with increasing solution concentration, with the adsorbed layer being only partially eluted by buffer. Treatment with surfactant removed more of the adsorbed protein in each case, with the remaining adsorbed mass varying little with concentration. Comparison of the data to an adsorption mechanism allowing for three adsorbed states, distinguished by binding strength, showed that the fraction of adsorbed molecules present in the most tightly bound state (state 3) decreased as adsorption occurred from solutions of increasing concentration. However, the absolute amounts of state 3 molecules present in each case were less dependent on solution concentration. Adsorption of T4 lysozyme into state 3 is suggested to occur early in the adsorption process and continue until some critical surface concentration is reached. Beyond this critical value of adsorbed mass, adsorption is suggested to progress with adoption of more loosely bound states.  相似文献   

10.
Structure of Protein Layers during Competitive Adsorption   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The formation of protein layers during competitive adsorption was studied with ellipsometry. Single, binary, and ternary protein solutions of human serum albumin (HSA), IgG, and fibrinogen (Fgn) were investigated at concentrations corresponding to blood plasma diluted 1/100. As a model surface, hydrophobic hexamethyldisiloxane (HMDSO) plasma polymer modified silica was used. By using multiambient media measurements of the bare substrate prior to protein adsorption the adsorbed amount as well as the thickness and refractive index of the adsorbed protein layer could be followedin situand in real time. Under conditions used in these experiments neither IgG nor fibrinogen could fully displace serum albumin from the interface. The buildup of the protein layer occurred via different mechanisms for the different protein systems. Fgn adsorbed in a rather flat orientation at low adsorbed amounts, while at higher surface coverage the protein reoriented to a more upright orientation in order to accommodate more molecules in the adsorbed layer. IgG adsorption proceeded mainly end-on with little reorientation or conformational change on adsorption. Finally, for HSA an adsorbed layer thickness greater than the molecular dimensions was observed at high concentrations (although not at low), indicating that aggregates or multilayers formed on HMDSO plasma polymer surfaces. For all protein mixtures the adsorbed layer structure and buildup indicated that Fgn was the protein dominating the adsorbed layer, although HSA partially blocked the adsorption of this protein. At high surface concentration, HSA/Fgn mixtures show an abrupt change in both adsorbed layer thickness and refractive index suggesting, e.g., an interfacial phase transition of the mixed protein layer. A similar but less pronounced behavior was observed for HSA/IgG. For IgG/Fgn and HSA/IgG/Fgn a buildup of the adsorbed layer similar to that displayed by Fgn alone was observed.  相似文献   

11.
The possibility of using a novel comb polymer consisting of a chitosan backbone with grafted 44 units long poly(ethylene oxide) side chains for reducing nonspecific protein adsorption to gold surfaces functionalized by COOH-terminated thiols has been explored. The comb polymer was attached to the surface in three different ways: by solution adsorption, covalent coupling, and microcontact printing. The protein repellent properties were tested by monitoring the adsorption of bovine serum albumin and fibrinogen employing surface plasmon resonance and imaging null ellipsometry. It was found that a significant reduction in protein adsorption is achieved as the comb polymer layer is sufficiently dense. For solution adsorption this was achieved by adsorption from high pH solutions. On the other hand, the best performance of the microcontact printed surfaces was obtained when the stamp was inked either at low or at high pH. For a given comb polymer layer thickness/poly(ethylene oxide) density, significant differences in protein repellent properties were observed between the different preparation methods, and it is suggested that a reduction in the mobility of the comb polymer layer generated by covalent attachment favors a reduced protein adsorption.  相似文献   

12.
Stable, pendant polyethylene oxide (PEO) layers were formed on medical-grade Pellethane? and Tygon? polyurethane surfaces, by adsorption and gamma-irradiation of PEO-polybutadiene-PEO triblock surfactants. Coated and uncoated polyurethanes were challenged individually or sequentially with nisin (a small polypeptide with antimicrobial activity) and/or fibrinogen, and then analyzed with time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS). Data reduction by robust principal components analysis (PCA) allowed detection of outliers, and distinguished adsorbed nisin and fibrinogen. Fibrinogen-contacted surfaces, with or without nisin, were very similar on uncoated polymer surfaces, consistent with nearly complete displacement or coverage of previously-adsorbed nisin by fibrinogen. In contrast, nisin-loaded PEO layers remained essentially unchanged upon challenge with fibrinogen, suggesting that the adsorbed nisin is stabilized within the pendant PEO layer, while the peptide-loaded PEO layer retains its ability to repel large proteins. Coatings of PEO loaded with therapeutic polypeptides on medical polymers have the potential to be used to produce anti-fouling and biofunctional surfaces for implantable or blood-contacting devices.  相似文献   

13.
Fibronectin displacement at polymer surfaces   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interactions of fibronectin with thin polymer films are studied in displacement experiments using human serum albumin. Fibronectin adsorption and exchange on two different maleic anhydride copolymer surfaces differing in hydrophobicity and surface charge density have been analyzed by quartz crystal microbalance and laser scanning microscopy with respect to adsorbed amounts, viscoelastic properties, and conformation. Fibronectin is concluded to become attached onto hydrophilic surfaces as a "softer", less rigid protein layer, in contrast to the more rigid, densely packed layer on hydrophobic surfaces. As a result, the fibronectin conformation is more distorted on the hydrophobic substrates together with remarkably different displacement characteristics in dependence on the adsorbed fibronectin surface concentration and the displacing albumin solution concentration. While the displacement kinetic remains constant for the strongly interacting surface, an acceleration in fibronectin exchange is observed for the weakly interacting surface with increasing fibronectin coverage. For displaced amounts, no change is determined for the hydrophobic substrate, in contrast to the hydrophilic substrate with a decrease of fibronectin exchange with decreasing coverage leading finally to a constant nondisplaceable amount of adsorbed proteins. Furthermore, the variation of the albumin exchange concentration reveals a stronger dependence of the kinetic for the weakly interacting substrate with higher rates at higher albumin concentrations.  相似文献   

14.
Biological events occurring at the implant-host interface, including protein adsorption are mainly influenced by surface properties of the implant. Titanium alloys, one of the most widely used implants, has shown good biocompatibility primarily through its surface oxide. In this study, a surface sol-gel process based on the surface reaction of metal alkoxides with a hydroxylated surface was used to prepare ultrathin titanium oxide (TiOx) coatings on silicon wafers. The oxide deposited on the surface was then modified by self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of silanes with different functional groups. Interesting surface morphology trends and protein adhesion properties of the modified titanium oxide surfaces were observed as studied by non-specific protein binding of serum albumin. The surface properties were investigated systematically using water contact angle, ellipsometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements. Results showed that the surface sol-gel process predominantly formed homogeneous, but rough and porous titanium oxide layers. The protein adsorption was dependent primarily on the silane chemistry, packing of the alkyl chains (extent of van der Waals interaction), morphology (porosity and roughness), and wettability of the sol-gel oxide. Comparison was made with a thermally evaporated TiOx-Ti/Si-wafer substrate (control). This method further extends the functionalization of surface sol-gel derived TiOx layers for possible titanium alloy bioimplant surface modification.  相似文献   

15.
Using a quartz crystal resonator system operating at 5 MHz the shear wave propagating properties of bovine serum albumin (BSA) have been monitored as it is adsorbed on a gold surface from a phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution. Employing a 2-layer model for the combined BSA layer and PBS solution, the viscoelasticity of the BSA layer may be determined in real time as the adsorption on gold proceeds. The viscoelasticity is found to depend on the pH of the PBS solution and changes gradually over long times. It is suggested that at the low frequency of the measurement, large-scale molecular motions are being monitored which are a consequence of the structural changes in the protein molecules undergoing adsorption. Such low-frequency molecular motions are difficult to examine by any other technique. The results and their interpretation in viscoelastic terms demonstrate the considerable potential of the quartz crystal resonator system for assessing the stability of proteins on surfaces and their suitability as coatings for prosthetic materials.  相似文献   

16.
The objective of this study was to investigate the adsorption of fibronectin on titanium (Ti) surfaces and the effect of pre-adsorbed fibronectin on osteoblast precursor cell attachment in vitro. Two different concentrations of bovine fibronectin were used in this study. Protein adsorption on Ti surfaces was analyzed using the micro bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay. Cell concentration on Ti and fibronectin pre-adsorbed Ti surfaces after 3 h incubation was analyzed using the Vybrant™ cell adhesion assay. Cell morphology on Ti and fibronectin pre-adsorbed Ti surfaces was observed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). After 180 min incubation, maximum adsorption of bovine fibronectin on Ti surfaces was observed. Fibronectin adsorption on Ti surfaces was observed to be significantly dependent on the initial concentration and the amount of incubation time. In the presence of 1 mg/ml fibronectin pre-adsorbed on Ti surfaces after 15 min, osteoblast precursor cell attachment on Ti surfaces was observed to be enhanced compared with control Ti surfaces, Ti surfaces pre-adsorbed with 1 mg/ml fibronectin for 180 min, and Ti surfaces pre-adsorbed with 0.1 mg/ml fibronectin for 15 and 180 min. No significant difference in cell attachment was observed between control Ti surfaces, Ti surfaces pre-adsorbed with fibronectin for 180 min, and Ti surfaces pre-adsorbed with 0.1 mg/ml fibronectin for 15 and 180 min. In addition, no differences in cell morphology of the attached osteoblast precursor cells on control Ti surfaces and Ti surfaces pre-adsorbed with fibronectin were observed in this study. It was concluded that an optimum concentration of adsorbed fibronectin on Ti surfaces plays an important role in governing cell attachment.  相似文献   

17.
Surface properties have a significant influence on the performance of biomedical devices. The influence of surface chemistry on the amount and distribution of adsorbed proteins has been evaluated by a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR). Adsorption of albumin, fibrinogen, and fibronectin was analyzed under static and dynamic conditions, employing self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) as model surfaces. AFM was performed in tapping mode with antibody-modified tips. Phase-contrast images showed protein distribution on SAMs and phase-shift entity provided information on protein conformation. SPR analysis revealed substrate-specific dynamics in each system investigated. When multi-protein solutions and diluted human plasma interacted with SAMs, SPR data suggested that surface chemistry governs the equilibrium composition of the protein layer.  相似文献   

18.
In situ conformational analysis of fibrinogen adsorbed on Si surfaces   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Fibrinogen is a major plasma protein. Previous investigations of structural changes of fibrinogen due to adsorption are mostly based on indirect evidence after its desorption, whereas our measurements were performed on fibrinogen in its adsorbed state. Specific enzyme-linked immunosorption experiments showed that the amount of adsorbed fibrinogen increased as the surface became more hydrophobic. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) investigations revealed the trinodular shape of fibrinogen molecules adsorbed on hydrophilic surfaces, whereas all of the molecules appeared globular on hydrophobic surfaces. The distribution of secondary structures in adsorbed fibrinogen was quantified by in situ Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) analysis. Substrates of identical chemical bulk composition but different surface hydrophobicity permit direct comparison among them. Adsorption properties of fibrinogen are different for each degree of hydrophobicity. Although there is some increase of turn structure and decrease of β-sheet structure, the secondary structure of adsorbed fibrinogen on hydrophilic surface turned out to be rather similar to that of the protein in solution phase with a major -helix content. Hydrophilic surfaces exhibit superior blood compatibility as required for medical applications.  相似文献   

19.
Protein adsorption behavior is at the heart of many of today's research fields including biotechnology and materials science. With understanding of protein-surface interactions, control over the conformation and orientation of immobilized species may ultimately allow tailor-made surfaces to be generated. In this contribution protein-surface interactions have been examined with particular focus on surface curvature with and without surface chemistry effects. Silica spheres with diameters in the range 15-165 nm with both hydrophilic and hydrophobic surface chemistries have been used as model substrates. Two proteins differing in size and shape, bovine serum albumin (BSA) and bovine fibrinogen (Fg), have been used in model studies of protein binding with detailed secondary structure analysis being performed using infrared spectroscopy (IR) on surface-bound proteins. Although trends in binding affinity and saturation values were similar for both proteins, albumin is increasingly less ordered on larger substrates, while fibrinogen, in contrast, loses secondary structure to a greater extent when adsorbing onto particles with high surface curvature. These effects are compounded by surface chemistry, with both proteins becoming more denatured on hydrophobic surfaces. Both surface chemistry and topography play key roles in determining the structure of the bound proteins. A model of the binding characteristics of these two proteins onto surfaces having differing curvature and chemistry is presented. We propose that properties of an adsorbed protein layer may be guided through careful consideration of surface structure, allowing the fabrication of materials/surface coatings with tailored bioactivity.  相似文献   

20.
The adsorption of bovine serum albumin (BSA) on platinum surfaces with a root-mean-square roughness ranging from 1.49nm to 4.62nm was investigated using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D). Two different BSA concentrations, 50microg/ml and 1mg/ml, were used, and the adsorption studies were complemented by monitoring the antibody interaction with the adsorbed BSA layer. The adsorption process was significantly influenced by the surface nano-roughness, and it was observed that the surface mass density of the adsorbed BSA layer is enhanced in a non-trivial way with the surface roughness. From a close examination of the energy dissipation vs. frequency shift plot obtained by the QCM-D technique, it was additionally observed that the BSA adsorption on the roughest surface is subject to several distinct adsorption phases revealing the presence of structural changes facilitated by the nano-rough surface morphology during the adsorption process. These changes were in particular noticeable for the adsorption at the low (50microg/ml) BSA concentration. The results confirm that the nano-rough surface morphology has a significant influence on both the BSA mass uptake and the functionality of the resulting protein layer.  相似文献   

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