posted on 2012-03-06, 00:00authored byNeil J. Lawrence, Jamie
M. Wells-Kingsbury, Marcella M. Ihrig, Teresa E. Fangman, Fereydoon Namavar, Chin Li Cheung
The influence of high-k dielectric bioceramics
with poly(amino acid) multilayer coatings on the adhesion behavior
of Escherichia coli (E. coli) was
studied by evaluating the density of bacteria coverage on the surfaces
of these materials. A biofilm forming K-12 strain (PHL628), a wild-type
strain (JM109), and an engineered strain (XL1-Blue) of E.
coli were examined for their adherence to zirconium oxide
(ZrO2) and tantalum oxide (Ta2O5)
surfaces functionalized with single and multiple layers of poly(amino
acid) polyelectrolytes made by the layer-by-layer (LBL) deposition.
Two poly(amino acids), poly(l-arginine) (PARG) and poly(l-aspartic acid) (PASP), were chosen for the functionalization
schemes. All three strains were found to grow and preferentially adhere
to bare bioceramic film surfaces over bare glass slides. The bioceramic
and glass surfaces functionalized with positively charged poly(amino
acid) top layers were observed to enhance the adhesion of these bacteria
by up to 4-fold in terms of bacteria surface coverage. Minimal bacteria
coverage was detected on surfaces functionalized with negatively charged
poly(amino acid) top layers. The effect of different poly(amino acid)
coatings to promote or minimize bacterial adhesion was observed to
be drastically enhanced with the bioceramic substrates than with glass.
Such observed enhancements were postulated to be attributed to the
formation of higher density of poly(amino acids) coatings enabled
by the high dielectric strength (k) of these bioceramics.
The multilayer poly(amino acid) functionalization scheme was successfully
applied to utilize this finding for micropatterning E. coli on bioceramic thin films.