Authors
Marcela MM Bilek, Daniel V Bax, Alexey Kondyurin, Yongbai Yin, Neil J Nosworthy, Keith Fisher, Anna Waterhouse, Anthony S Weiss, Cristobal G dos Remedios, David R McKenzie
Publication date
2011/8/30
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
35
Pages
14405-14410
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Immobilizing a protein, that is fully compatible with the patient, on the surface of a biomedical device should make it possible to avoid adverse responses such as inflammation, rejection, or excessive fibrosis. A surface that strongly binds and does not denature the compatible protein is required. Hydrophilic surfaces do not induce denaturation of immobilized protein but exhibit a low binding affinity for protein. Here, we describe an energetic ion-assisted plasma process that can make any surface hydrophilic and at the same time enable it to covalently immobilize functional biological molecules. We show that the modification creates free radicals that migrate to the surface from a reservoir beneath. When they reach the surface, the radicals form covalent bonds with biomolecules. The kinetics and number densities of protein molecules in solution and free radicals in the reservoir control the time required to form a full …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MMM Bilek, DV Bax, A Kondyurin, Y Yin, NJ Nosworthy… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011