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  4. Surface Assembly of Catechol-Functionalized Poly(l-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) Copolymer on Titanium Exploiting Combined Electrostatically Driven Self-Organization and Biomimetic Strong Adhesion
 
research article

Surface Assembly of Catechol-Functionalized Poly(l-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) Copolymer on Titanium Exploiting Combined Electrostatically Driven Self-Organization and Biomimetic Strong Adhesion

Saxer, Sina
•
Portmann, Cyril  
•
Tosatti, Samuele
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2010
Macromolecules

Nonfouling coatings, based on surface-tethered, hydrophilic polymer chains, have widespread application in areas such as biosensing, medical devices, and biotechnology. Self-organization of polymers is a particularly attractive approach given its simplicity and cost-effectiveness in the application. Here we present a new class of polymers based on the polycationic poly(l-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) copolymer (PLL-g-PEG) with a fraction of the amine-terminated lysine side chains covalently conjugated to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DHPAA). This copolymer is shown to adsorb and self-organize as a confluent monolayer on negatively charged titanium oxide surfaces, driven by long-range electrostatic attraction, while the catechol groups of DHPAA spontaneously engage in strong, coordinative binding to the substrate surface, similar to the biomimetic dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) found in mussel adhesive proteins. The adsorption kinetics and resulting polymer coverage are demonstrated to critically depend on (a) a rational design of the copolymer architecture with a compromise between sufficient positive charges in the PLL backbone and a minimal grafting density of DHPAA groups and (b) optimum choice of ionic strength and temperature of the assembly solution. PLL-graft-(DHPAA; PEG) adlayers exhibit excellent resistance to nonspecific protein (fibrinogen) adsorption. To test the chemical stability of the polymeric layer, coated substrates were exposed to high ionic salt solutions and proved to remain nonfouling thanks to stable catechol−substrate anchorage, in stark contrast to the control PLL-g-PEG copolymer that desorbed under these conditions as a consequence of screening of the (purely) electrostatic surface forces. Furthermore, polymer-coated substrates resisted attachment of the cyanobacterium Lyngbya sp. over a time frame of at least 100 days.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/ma9020664
Web of Science ID

WOS:000273618100059

Author(s)
Saxer, Sina
Portmann, Cyril  
Tosatti, Samuele
Gademann, Karl  
Zürcher, Stefan
Textor, Marcus
Date Issued

2010

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Published in
Macromolecules
Volume

43

Issue

2

Start page

1050

End page

1060

Subjects

Consistent-Field Theory

•

Metal-Oxide Surfaces

•

Protein Adsorption

•

Sequential Adsorption

•

Molecular Brushes

•

Monolayers

•

Resistance

•

Polymer

•

Layers

•

Conformation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSYNC  
Available on Infoscience
October 26, 2009
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/43884
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