posted on 2021-03-03, 19:36authored byFabian Obstals, Lena Witzdam, Manuela Garay-Sarmiento, Nina Yu. Kostina, Jonas Quandt, Rolf Rossaint, Smriti Singh, Oliver Grottke, Cesar Rodriguez-Emmenegger
Nature utilizes endothelium
as a blood interface that perfectly
controls hemostasis, preventing the uncontrolled formation of thrombi.
The management of positive and negative feedback that finely tunes
thrombosis and fibrinolysis is essential for human life, especially
for patients who undergo extracorporeal circulation (ECC) after a
severe respiratory or cardiac failure. The exposure of blood to a
surface different from healthy endothelium inevitably initiates coagulation,
drastically increasing the mortality rate by thromboembolic complications.
In the present study, an ultrathin antifouling fibrinolytic coating
capable of disintegrating thrombi in a self-regulated manner is reported.
The coating system is composed of a polymer brush layer that can prevent
any unspecific interaction with blood. The brushes are functionalized
with a tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to establish localized fibrinolysis
that solely and exclusively is active when it is required. This interactive
switching between the dormant and active state is realized through
an amplification mechanism that increases (positive feedback) or restores
(negative feedback) the activity of tPA depending on whether a thrombus
is detected and captured or not. Thus, only a low surface density
of tPA is necessary to lyse real thrombi. Our work demonstrates the
first report of a coating that self-regulates its fibrinolytic activity
depending on the conditions of blood.