Poly(l-lysine) grafted with poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG), a polycationic copolymer that is positively charged at neutral pH, spontaneously adsorbs from aqueous solution onto negatively charged surfaces, resulting in the formation of stable polymeric monolayers and rendering the surfaces protein-resistant to a degree related to the PEG surface density. A set of PLL-g-PEG polymers with different architectures was synthesized. The grafting ratio, g, of the polymer, defined as the ratio of the number of lysine monomers to the number of PEG side chains, was systematically varied between 2 and 23, and PEG molecular weights of 1, 2, and 5 kDa were used. The polymers were adsorbed onto niobium oxide-coated substrates, leading to highly different but well-controlled PEG surface densities with maximal values of 0.9, 0.5, and 0.3 chains/nm2 for the three PEG molecular weights, respectively. Time-of-flight secondary-ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) was used in conjunction with the in situ optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (OWLS) technique to investigate the interface architecture. While ToF-SIMS provided surface-analytical data on the polymeric adlayer, OWLS allowed the quantitative determination of the adsorbed polymer mass. Extremely good correlations were established between the ToF-SIMS data (obtained in UHV) and the in situ OWLS results. The amount of serum adsorbed, determined quantitatively by OWLS, was found to depend systematically on the surface coverage in terms of the ethylene glycol (EG) density, controlled by both PEG molecular weight and grafting ratio, g. Serum adsorption dropped gradually from 590 ng/cm2 on bare Nb2O5 to <2 ng/cm2 (=detection limit of the OWLS technique) for EG densities ≥ 20 nm-2. The PLL-g-PEG technology shows itself to be an efficient, cost-effective, and robust tool for the immobilization of PEG chains onto metal oxide surfaces. The precise control over PEG surface density across a wide range allows for the production of tailored surfaces with controlled degrees of bio-interactiveness. Such surfaces are expected to have a substantial potential for applications in biomedical and bioanalytical devices.
Poly(L-lysine)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) copolymers with various grafting ratios were adsorbed to niobium pentoxide-coated silicon wafers and characterized before and after protein adsorption using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS). Three proteins of different sizes, myoglobin (16 kD), albumin (67 kD), and fibrinogen (340 kD), were studied. XPS was used to quantify the amount of protein adsorbed to the bare and PEGylated surfaces. ToF-SIMS and principal component analysis (PCA) were used to study protein conformational changes on these surfaces. The smallest protein, myoglobin, generally adsorbed in higher numbers than the much larger fibrinogen. Protein adsorption was lowest on the surfaces with the highest PEG chain surface density and increased as the PEG layer density decreased. The highest adsorption was found on lysine-coated and bare niobium surfaces. ToF-SIMS and PCA data evaluation provided further information on the degree of protein denaturation, which, for a particular protein, were found to decrease with increasing PEG surface density and increase with decreasing protein size.
PEGylated Nb2O5 surfaces were obtained by the adsorption of poly(L-lysine)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) copolymers, allowing control of the PEG surface density, as well as the surface charge. PEG (MW 2 kDa) surface densities between 0 and 0.5 nm(-2) were obtained by changing the PEG to lysine-mer ratio in the PLL-g-PEG polymer, resulting in net positive, negative and neutral surfaces. Colloid probe atomic force microscopy (AFM) was used to characterize the interfacial forces associated with the different surfaces. The AFM force analysis revealed interplay between electrical double layer and steric interactions, thus providing information on the surface charge and on the PEG layer thickness as a function of copolymer architecture. Adsorption of the model proteins lysozyme, alpha-lactalbumin, and myoglobin onto the various PEGylated surfaces was performed to investigate the effect of protein charge. In addition, adsorption experiments were performed over a range of ionic strengths, to study the role of electrostatic forces between surface charges and proteins acting through the PEG layer. The adsorbed mass of protein, measured by optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (OWLS), was shown to depend on a combination of surface charge, protein charge, PEG thickness, and grafting density. At high grafting density and high ionic strength, the steric barrier properties of PEG determine the net interfacial force. At low ionic strength, however, the electrical double layer thickness exceeds the thickness of the PEG layer, and surface charges "shining through" the PEG layer contribute to protein interactions with PLL-g-PEG coated surfaces. The combination of AFM surface force measurements and protein adsorption experiments provides insights into the interfacial forces associated with various PEGylated surfaces and the mechanisms of protein resistance.
Adsorbed layers of "comb-type" copolymers consisting of PEG chains grafted onto a poly(l-lysine) (PLL) backbone on niobium oxide substrates were studied by colloid-probe AFM in order to characterize the interfacial forces associated with coatings of varying architectures (PEG/PLL ratios and PEG chain lengths) and their relevance to protein resistance. The steric and electrostatic forces measured varied substantially with the architecture of the PLL-g-PEG copolymers. Varying the ionic strength of the buffer solutions enabled discrimination between electrostatic and steric-entropic contributions to the net interfacial force. For high PEG grafting densities the steric component was most prominent, but at low ionic strengths and high grafting densities, a repulsive electrostatic surface force was also observed; its origin was assigned to the niobia charges beneath the copolymer, as insufficient protonated amine groups in the PLL backbone were available for compensation of the oxide surface charges. For lower grafting densities and lower ionic strengths there was a substantial attractive electrostatic contribution arising from interaction of the electrical double layer arising from the protonated amine groups, with that of the silica probe surface (as under low ionic strength conditions, the electrical double layer was thicker than the PEG layer). For these PLL-g-PEG coatings the net interfacial force can thus be a markedly varying superposition of electrostatic and steric-entropic contributions, depending on various factors. The force curves correlate with protein adsorption data, demonstrating the utility of AFM colloid-probe force measurements for quantitative analysis of surface forces and how they determine interfacial interactions with proteins. Such characterization of the net interfacial forces is essential to elucidate the multiple types of interfacial forces relevant to the interactions between PLL-g-PEG coatings and proteins and to advance interpretation of protein adsorption or repellence beyond the oversimplified steric barrier model; in particular, our data demonstrate the importance of an ionic-strength-dependent minimum PEG layer thickness to screen the electrostatic interactions of charged interfaces.
In this work, we have explored the application of poly(L-lysine)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) as an additive to improve the lubricating properties of water for metal-oxide-based tribo-systems. The adsorption behavior of the polymer onto both silicon oxide and iron oxide has been characterized by optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (OWLS). Several tribological approaches, including ultra-thin-film interferometry, the mini traction machine (MTM), and pin-on-disk tribometry, have been employed to characterize the frictional properties of the oxide tribo-systems in various contact regimes. The polymer appears to form a protective layer on the tribological interface in aqueous buffer solution and improves both the load-carrying and boundarylayer-lubrication properties of water.
The electrostatic adsorption onto charged surfaces of comb copolymers comprising a polyelectrolyte backbone and pendent PEG side chains, such as poly(l-lysine)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG), has in previous studies provided protein-repellent thin coatings, particularly on metal oxide surfaces. A drawback of this approach is, however, the instability of such adsorbed layers under extreme pH values or high ionic strength. We have overcome this limitation in the present study by covalently immobilizing PLL-g-PEG copolymers onto aldehyde plasma-modified substrates. Silicon wafers, optical waveguide chips, and perfluorinated ethylene-co-propylene (FEP) polymer substrates were first coated with a thin plasma polymer layer using a propionaldehyde plasma, followed by covalent immobilization of PLL-g-PEG via reductive amination between amine groups of the PLL backbone with aldehyde groups on the plasma-deposited interlayer. The stability in high salt media and the protein resistance of different molecular architectures of immobilized PLL-g-PEG layers were quantitatively investigated by XPS, an optical waveguide technique (OWLS), and ToF-SIMS. The adsorption of bovine serum albumin was found to be below the detection limit (<2 ng/cm(2)), as for electrostatically adsorbed PLL-g-PEG layers. However, after 24 h of exposure of covalently immobilized layers of PLL-g-PEG to high ionic strength buffer (2400 mM NaCl), no significant change in the protein resistance was observed, whereas under the same conditions electrostatically adsorbed PLL-g-PEG coatings lost their protein resistance. Moreover, covalent immobilization via an aldehyde plasma interlayer enabled the application of PLL-g-PEG layers onto substrates such as FEP onto which electrostatic binding is not possible. These findings create a generic platform for the covalent immobilization of PLL-g-PEG onto a wide variety of substrates.
Reduction of the interfacial friction for the contact of a silicon oxide surface with sodium borosilicate in aqueous solutions has been accomplished through the adsorption of poly(L-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) on one or both surfaces. Spontaneous polymer adsorption has been achieved via the electrostatic attraction of the cationic polylysine polymer backbone and a net negative surface charge, present for a specific range of solution pH values. Interfacial friction has been measured in aqueous solution, in the absence of wear, and on a microscopic scale with atomic force microscopy. The successful investigation of the polymer-coated interfaces has been aided by the use of sodium borosilicate microspheres (5.1 microm diameter) as the contacting probe tip. Measurements of interfacial friction as a function of applied load reveal a significant reduction in friction upon the adsorption of the polymer, as well as sensitivity to the coated nature of the interface (single-sided versus two-sided) and the composition of the adsorbed polymer. These measurements demonstrate the fundamental opportunity for lubrication in aqueous environments through the selective adsorption of polymer coatings.
Control of protein adsorption onto solid surfaces is a critical area of biomaterials and biosensors research. Application of high performance surface analysis techniques to these problems can improve the rational design and understanding of coatings that control protein adsorption. We have used static time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) to investigate several poly(L-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) adlayers adsorbed electrostatically onto negatively charged niobium pentoxide (Nb(2)O(5)) substrates. By varying the PEG graft ratio (i.e., the number of lysine monomers per grafted PEG chain) and the molecular weights of the PLL and PEG polymers, the amount of protein adsorption can be tailored between 1 and 300 ng/cm(2). Detailed multivariate analysis using principal component analysis (PCA) of the positive and negative ion TOF-SIMS spectra showed changes in the outermost surface of the polymer films that were related to the density and molecular weight of the PEG chains on the surface. However, no significant differences were noted due to PLL molecular weight, despite observed differences in the serum adsorption characteristics for adlayers of PLL-g-PEG polymers with different PLL molecular weights. From the PCA results, multivariate peak intensity ratios were developed that correlated with the thickness of the adlayer and the enrichment of the PEG chains and the methoxy terminus of the PEG chains at the outermost surface of the adlayer. Furthermore, partial least squares regression was used to correlate the TOF-SIMS spectra with the amount of protein adsorption, resulting in a predictive model for determining the amount of protein adsorption on the basis of the TOF-SIMS spectra. The accuracy of the prediction of the amount of serum adsorption depended on the molecular weight of the PLL and PEG polymers and the PEG graft ratio. The combination of multivariate analysis and static TOF-SIMS provides detailed information on the surface chemistry and insight into the mechanism for protein resistance of the coatings.
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