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Surface modification of polypyrrole/biopolymer composites for controlled protein and cellular adhesion

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posted on 2024-11-16, 09:45 authored by Paul Molino, Binbin Zhang, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Timothy Hanks
The ability to control the interaction between proteins and cells with biomaterials is critical for the effective application of materials for a variety of biomedical applications. Herein, the surface modification of the biological dopant dextran sulphate-doped polypyrrole (PPy-DS) with poly(ethylene glycol) to generate a biomaterial interface that is highly resistant to protein and cellular adhesion is described. Thiolated poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG-thiol) was covalently bound to PPy-DS backbone via a thiol-ene reaction. The surface resistance to an extracellular matrix protein fibronectin increased with increasing molecular weight and concentration of PEG-thiol, and was further optimised via increasing the reaction temperature and the pH of the reactant aqueous solution. Optimised surface modification conditions substantially reduced interfacial protein adsorption, with the complete inhibition of adhesion and colonisation by primary mouse myoblasts. PEG-thiol-modified inherently conducting polymers are highly protein resistant multifunctional materials that are promising compounds for a range of biomedical and aquatic applications

Funding

COLLABORATIVE WORK AT SCHOOL AS A STRATEGY TO INDUCE BEGINNING TEACHERS

Coordenação de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

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Citation

Molino, P. J., Zhang, B., Wallace, G. G. and Hanks, T. (2013). Surface modification of polypyrrole/biopolymer composites for controlled protein and cellular adhesion. Biofouling, 29 (10), 1155-1167.

Journal title

Biofouling

Volume

29

Issue

10

Pagination

1155-1167

Language

English

RIS ID

84176

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