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Efforts to control
biofouling—the spontaneous and unwanted adsorption of
proteins, cells, and bacteria on surfaces—may have another
tool in the form of a new class of polymers that mimic
polypeptides, according to a recent study by Northwestern
University researchers. Biofouling is a serious problem in
health care and other arenas. It causes malfunction of medical
implants and diagnostic devices, exposes patients to
infections and complications, and increases the cost of
treatment.
The new polymers consist of a short “anchoring peptide” and
a variable-length N-substituted glycine oligomer (J.
Am. Chem. Soc., published online May 13, dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja0522534).
The design—by Phillip B.
Messersmith, associate professor of biomedical
engineering; Annelise
E. Barron, associate professor of chemical and biological
engineering; and coworkers—enables the polymer to stick to a
surface robustly while preventing proteins and cells from
sticking to it.
The polymer shown is an example of the new class. It
consists of an anchoring peptide that mimics an adhesive
protein from marine mussels that is attached to a chain of 20
N-methoxyethylglycines, which provides resistance to
protein and cell fouling.
The team demonstrated that titanium surfaces coated with
this polymer adsorbed significantly less protein than did bare
titanium. The coating maintained its protein and cell
resistance over several months. Coatings made from such
polymers could help prevent fouling in physiological, marine,
and industrial environments, the researchers say. |