posted on 2017-11-30, 00:00authored byLeixiao Yu, Yong Hou, Chong Cheng, Christoph Schlaich, Paul-Ludwig Michael Noeske, Qiang Wei, Rainer Haag
A new “adsorption-cross-linking”
technology is presented to generate a highly dense polymer brush coating
on various nonpolar substrates, including the most inert and low-energy
surfaces of poly(dimethylsiloxane) and poly(tetrafluoroethylene).
This prospective surface modification strategy is based on a tailored
bifunctional amphiphilic block copolymer with benzophenone units as
the hydrophobic anchor/chemical cross-linker and terminal azide groups
for in situ postmodification. The resulting polymer brushes exhibited
long-term and ultralow protein adsorption and cell adhesion benefiting
from the high density and high hydration ability of polyglycerol blocks.
The presented antifouling brushes provided a highly stable and robust
bioinert background for biospecific adsorption of desired proteins
and bacteria after secondary modification with bioactive ligands,
e.g., mannose for selective ConA and Escherichia coli binding.