Stable and uniform layers of protein molecules at the surface are important to build passive devices as well as active constructs for smart biointerfaces for a large number of biomedical applications. In this context, a strategy to build-up surfaces able to anchor protein molecules on specific and controlled surface sites has been developed. Human serum albumin (HSA) has been chosen as a model protein due to its important antithrombogenic properties and its features in cell response highly valuable for in vivo devices. Uniform self-assembled monolayers of 2,2':6'2″-terpyridines (SAM), whose sites were further employed to chelate copper and iron ions, forming SAM-Cu(II) and SAM-Fe(II) complexes, have been developed. The effect of two metal cations on the physicochemical features of SAM, including thickness, Young's modulus, and tip-monolayer adhesion factors, has been investigated. Protein adsorption at different concentrations showed that the copper ion-templated surfaces exhibit highly specific mass uptake, kinetic behavior, and recognition and anchoring of HSA molecules owing to the coordination sphere of the different cations. The results pave the way to the development of a more general strategy to obtain ordered and density-tuned arrays of specific metal cations, which in turn would drive the anchoring of precise proteins for different biological functions.
Recent surveys have shown that the number of nanoparticle-based formulations actually used at the clinical level is significantly lower than expected a decade ago. One reason for this is that the nanoparticle physicochemical properties fall short for handling the complexity of biological environments and for preventing nonspecific protein adsorption. In this study, we address the issue of the interactions of plasma proteins with polymer coated surfaces. To this aim, we use a non-covalent grafting-to method to functionalize iron oxide sub-10 nm nanoparticles and iron oxide flat substrates, and compare their protein responses. The functionalized copolymers consist in alternating poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) chains and phosphonic acid grafted on the same backbone. Quartz Crystal Microbalance with dissipation was used to monitor the polymer adsorption kinetics and to evaluate the resistance to protein adsorption. On flat substrates, functionalized PEG copolymers adsorb and form a brush in the moderate or in the highly stretched regimes, with density between 0.15 and 1.5 nm-2. PEG layers using phosphonic acid as linkers exhibit excellent protein resistance. In contrast, layers prepared with carboxylic acid as grafting agent exhibit mitigated protein responses and layer destructuration. The present study establishes a correlation between the long-term stability of PEG coated particles in biofluids and the protein resistance of surfaces coated with the same polymers.
Using the framework of an investigation of the stimuli-responsive behavior of peptide assembly on a solid surface, this study on the behavior of a chemisorbed peptide on a gold surface was performed. The studied peptide is a dimeric form of the antimicrobial peptide Trichogin GAIV, which was also modified by substituting the glycine with lysine residues, while the N-terminus octanoyl group was replaced by a lipoic one that was able to bind to the gold surface. In this way, a chemically linked peptide assembly that is pH-responsive was obtained because of the protonation/deprotonation of the sidechains of the Lys residues. Information about the effect of protonation/deprotonation equilibria switching the pH from acid (pH = 3) to basic (pH = 11) conditions was obtained macroscopically by performing Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D), Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR), Nanoplasmonic Sensing (NPS), and FTIR techniques. Using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, it is possible to explain, at the molecular level, our main experimental results: (1) pH changes induce a squeezing behavior in the system, consisting in thickness and mass variations in the peptide layer, which are mainly due to the pH-driven hydrophilic/hydrophobic character of the lysine residues, and (2) the observed hysteresis is due to small conformational rearrangements from helix to beta sheets occurring mainly on the first half of the peptide, closer to the surface, while the second half remains almost unaffected. The latter result, together with the evidence that the layer thickness is not simply double the assembly of the monomeric analog, indicates that the dimeric peptide does not behave as a double monomer, but assumes very peculiar features.
It is well-known that the polysaccharide scleroglucan (Sclg) exhibits a triple-helix conformation (triplex) and it is able to form hydrogels in water solution. Furthermore, these hydrogels are influenced by the presence of borax, in terms of rheological and drug release properties. In previous works, we showed that the presence of borax stabilizes the intertriplex interactions and that the property variations, induced by borax, can be fully explained, considering that the Sclg triplexes can form nanochannel-like structures. In this paper, the stability of these aggregates has been experimentally studied by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM) and theoretically investigated by means of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The simulations indicate that the borax stabilizes nanochannel-like structures when seven triplexes are considered. The simultaneous presence of different Sclg triplexes in a narrow space strongly influences the properties of confined water molecules in a way similar, in many aspects, to that of water molecules located in the inner part of well-defined nanochannels (e.g., diffusion inside carbon nanotubes). As a consequence, also the conformational properties of flanking regions of Sclg triplexes are influenced. Furthermore, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) data show that the well-known conformational transition occurring at 280 K for Sclg does not take place in the presence of borax. The MD simulations suggest that such lack of transition is a direct consequence of the presence of borax. The role of Na+ counterions in the hydrogel structure is also investigated.