Physiochemical Surface Modification & Non-fouling Surfaces Flashcards

1
Q

Physiochemical Surface Modification

A
  • goal is to retain the bulk physical properties of the biomaterial, while modifying the outermost layer to influence biointeractions
  • should be as thin as possible while ensuring uniformity, durability, and functionality
  • some possible goals: blood compatibility, cell adhesion, controlling protein adsorption, lubricity, etc
  • resist layer division (delamination) by covalent bonding, intermixing (like through IPNs), or applying primer layer
  • surface rearrangement at molecular scale is driven by thermodynamic minimization of “interfacial energy” (ex: fluorinated molecules blossom at the air material interface)
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2
Q

Non-Specific Surface Modification Methods

A
  • leave a distribution of different functional groups at the surface
  • Plasma (or RFGD), which oxidizes surfaces and gases in a highly reactive environment
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3
Q

Plasma (RFGD) treatment

A
  • atomically and molecularly dissociated gaseous environments (contain ions, free radicals, atoms, photons, etc)
  • ability to react with/polymerize molecules from the gas phase, which can then combine higher molecular weight units that precipitate onto substrate
  • conformal, coat pretty much any surface, easy to prepare, and sterile
  • yields ill-defined surface chemistries due to random nature of reactions (can produce highly crosslinked polymeric films)
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4
Q

Specific Surface Modification Methods

A
  • well-defined, reactive surface chemical groups to attach specific surface modifying species
  • techniques include silanization, ion beam implantation, Langmuir-Blodgett deposition, self-assembled monolayers (SAMs), layer-by-layer and polyelectrolyte deposition, surface modifying additives, conversion coatings, and parylene coating
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5
Q

Silanization

A
  • densely presented on glass, silicon, alumina, titania, quartz, and other metal oxide surfaces
  • bind to form self-assembled, covalently bound monolayers on hydroxylated surfaces
  • silane-hydroxl bond prone to hydrolysis
  • pretty much can customize which functional group the surface presents
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6
Q

Ion beam implantation

A
  • injects accelerated ions into the surface zone of a material
  • modifies hardness, lubricity, toughness, corrosion, conductivity, and bioreactivity
  • primarily used with materials with crystal lattice structure (metals, ceramics, glasses, and semi-conductors)
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7
Q

Langmuir-Blodgett deposition

A
  • coats a surface with one or more highly ordered layers of surfactant (amphiphilic) molecules
  • molecules have a polar end and nonpolar end
  • films are stabilized after by crosslinking
  • uses water bath to force molecules onto surface
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8
Q

Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs)

A
  • requires moderate-to-strong adsorption of chemical anchoring group and van der Waals interactions of alkyl chains (9-24 carbons), producing crystalline-esque structure
  • examples: n-alkyl silanes on hydroxylated substrates, amines and alcohols on platinum substrates, etc.
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9
Q

Layer-by-Layer and Multilayer Polyelectrolyte Deposition

A
  • alternating dip-coating of molecules with alternating charges (polyanions or polycations like hyaluronic acid and chitosan)
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10
Q

Surface modifying additives

A
  • added in low concentrations during bulk material fabrication
  • spontaneously rise to dominate the surface, minimizing interfacial energy
  • like fluoropolymers!
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11
Q

Conversion coatings and Parylene coating

A
  • conversion coatings modify the surface of a metal into a dense oxide-rich layer
  • corrosion protection, better adhesion, sometimes lubricity (generally uses acid washes)
  • parylene coating is used widely to insulate electrical components
  • simultaneous evaporation, pyrolysis, deposition, and polymerization of a di-para-xylene monomer
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12
Q

Non-fouling surfaces

A
  • resist the adsorption of protein and/or cell adhesion
  • acute/delayed versus persistent
  • hydrophilic surfaces are more likely to resist protein adsorption, while hydrophobic will adsorb monolayer of tightly adsorbed proteins
  • resistance at interfaces is directly related to the resistance of interfacial groups to release bound water molecules
  • lots of applications (like catheters, biosensors, microfluidic devices, etc)
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13
Q

Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)

A
  • immobilized using a variety of methods, like cross-linking, surfactants, grafted brush, etc
  • longer the chain, the lower the surface density needed to be non-fouling
  • in SAMs, minimum of 3 EG units needed to be effective
  • conformation and surface density are variables
  • osmotic repulsion occurs due to highly ordered water layer created within PEG’s hydrated coils
  • for large chains, entropic repulsion occurs to random polymer coils wanting to retain larger volume
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14
Q

More on Non-fouling

A
  • protein-coated surfaces can be considered non-fouling, as they’ll adsorb as a monolayer and resist secondary layers by retaining water
  • surface packing density is critical factor
  • commonly hydrophilic, electrically neutral, and have hydrogen-bond acceptor (NOT DONOR) groups
  • pluronics (zwitterionic groups on backbone) and naturally occurring molecules and block non-specific protein/cell adsorption/adhesion
  • kosmotropes work as well, as they order surrounding water molecules
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15
Q

Thrombogenicity

A
  • ability of a material to induce/promote the formation of a thromboemboli
  • considered a rate parameter (low levels are tolerated as they are constantly cleared anyways)
  • becomes an issue when rates clog flow paths, etc
  • truly nonthrombogenic material surface does not yet exist
  • a material’s thrombogenicity is characterized by level of platelet adhesion and activation, leukocyte activation, and complement activation
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16
Q

Nonthrombogenic Treatments/Strategies

A
  • inert materials with low thrombogenicity (unsure whether should be hydrophilic or hydrophobic)
  • can coat/graft with hydrophilic hydrogels, if the chemistry fits
  • PEG grafting/immobilization/surface adsorption, albumin coating/adsorption on hydrophobic surfaces
  • zwitterionic groups or phospholipid mimicking
  • SAMs
  • heparin-like materials or surface modifying additives
17
Q

Nonthrombogenic Treatments pt 2

A
  • active materials that limit thrombogenicity
  • heparinization: popular, many methods, helps to inhibit thrombin and factor X with antithrombin III (acts as a catalyst)
  • hirudin, curcumin, thrombomodulin (maybe expand…?)
  • antiplatelet agents (platelet GPIIb/IIIa antagonist, factor X or tissue factor inhibitor)
  • endothelization (ingrowth)
18
Q

Surface-Immobilized Biomolecules

A
  • plenty of different chemistries and approaches for the same biomolecule to be immobilized
  • maintaining bioactivity is critical (given proteins’ tendency to unfold)
  • biomaterial surfaces with pendant surface hydroxyl (-OH), carbonyl (-COOH), or primary amine (-NH2) groups are advantageous in immobilizing biomaterials using “azide, alkyne, and sulfhydryl”
  • for metals, metal oxides, inorganic glasses, or ceramics, can add chemically immobilized or physically adsorbed polymeric/surfactant adlayers
  • use plasma discharge or ozone to modify surface composition
19
Q

Surface-Immobilizing part 2

A
  • many different biologically functional molecules can be immobilized chemically/physically for other applications
  • can be made cell adhesive using covalent immobilizing of ECM peptides that engage with integrin receptors
  • thus, can elicit specific cell functions or enzymatic reactions
  • three major methods: physical adsorption, physical entrapment, covalent attachment
  • physical adsorption: van der Waals, electrostatic, affinity recognition
  • physical entrapment: microcapsules, hydrogels, and physical mixtures like drug delivery
  • covalent attachment: soluble polymer conjugates, conjugates on solid surfaces or within hydrogels (has support functions and major reacting groups on proteins)