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Title: Elucidation of protein adsorption behavior on polymeric surfaces: toward high-density, high-payload protein templates. Author: Kumar N, Parajuli O, Gupta A, Hahm JI. Journal: Langmuir; 2008 Mar 18; 24(6):2688-94. PubMed ID: 18225924. Abstract: The elucidation of protein adsorption behavior on polymeric surfaces is very important, since their use as arrays and carriers of biomolecules is ever growing for a wide variety of bioapplications. We evaluate protein adsorption characteristics on chemically homogeneous and heterogeneous polymeric surfaces by employing polystyrene-block-polymethylmethacrylate (PS-b-PMMA) diblock copolymer, PS homopolymer, PMMA homopolymer, and PS/PMMA blend as protein templates. We also investigate distance-dependent protein adsorption behavior on the interfacial region between PS and PMMA. We observe selective protein adsorption exclusively onto PS areas for the chemically heterogeneous PS-b-PMMA and PS/PMMA blend templates. On blend films, protein adsorption is highly favored on the PS regions located near the PS:PMMA interface over that on the PS areas situated away from the interface. Protein density on PS domains is inversely proportional to the separation distance between two neighboring PS:PMMA interfaces. We also observe a higher protein density on the PS-b-PMMA than on the PS or PMMA homopolymer templates. This effect is due to the fact that chemically heterogeneous PS-b-PMMA presents periodically spaced PS:PMMA interfaces on the nanometer scale, whereas no such interfaces are present on homopolymer films. The density of protein molecules on the heterogeneous PS-b-PMMA surface is approximately 3-4-fold higher than on the homogeneous PS surface for the identical experimental conditions. These results demonstrate that self-assembling, chemically heterogeneous, nanoscale domains in PS-b-PMMA diblock copolymers can be used as excellent, high-payload, high-density protein templates. The unique advantages of the diblock copolymer may prove the spontaneously constructed protein nanotemplates to be highly suitable as functional substrates in many proteomics applications.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]