posted on 2017-04-05, 00:00authored byIrma Liascukiene, Karim El Kirat, Mathieu Beauvais, Svajus J. Asadauskas, Jean-François Lambert, Jessem Landoulsi
Herein,
we report the coating of a surface with a random nanoscale
topography with a lipid film formed by an anchoring stearic acid (SA)
monolayer and phospholipid (DPPC) layers. For this purpose, different
procedures were used for phospholipid coating, including adsorption
from solution, drop deposition, and spin-coating. Our results reveal
that the morphology of the obtained lipid films is strongly influenced
by the topography of the underlying substrate but also impacted by
other factors, including the coating procedure and surface wettability
(modulated by the presence of SA). These coated surfaces showed a
remarkable antifouling behavior toward proteins, with different yields
of repellency (Yrp) depending on the amount/organization
of DPPC on the nanostructured substrate. The interaction between the
proteins and phospholipids involves a partial detachement of the film.
The use of characterization techniques with different charcateristics
(accuracy, selectivity, analysis depth) did not reveal any obvious
vertical heterogenity of the probed interface, indicating that the
lipid film acts as a nonfouling coating on the whole surface, including
the outermost part (nanoprotrusions) and deeper regions (valleys).