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Reduced protein adsorption and platelet adhesion by controlled variation of oligomaltose surfactant polymer coatings
Authors:Ruegsegger M A  Marchant R E
Affiliation:Department of Biomedical Engineering, Wickenden Building 202, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-7207, USA.
Abstract:A series of oligomaltose surfactant polymers were prepared by the simultaneous coupling of hydrophilic maltolactone [of 2(M2), 7(M7), or 15(M15) glucose units] and hydrophobic N-(hexanoyloxy)succinimide (Hex) groups to the amino groups of a poly(vinyl amine) backbone. The surfactants were characterized by FTIR and 1H-NMR spectroscopies for purity and composition. Contact-angle and AFM measurements confirmed full monolayer adsorption for all surfactants on a model surface, highly oriented pyrolitic graphite, while full coverage was observed on polyethylene only for PVAm (M7:Hex) due to the optimal M7:Hex ratio and Hex chain density. On graphite, protein resistance increased with increasing coating thickness from 81.4 to 85.8 to 95.8% for the M2, M7, and M15 surfactants, respectively. Additionally, static platelet adhesion on all three surfactants dropped substantially to 15% (M2), 17% (M7), and 16% (M15)compared to glass (adhesion normalized to 100%) and a polyurethane (24%) surface. Protein- and platelet-resistant properties of the controlled oligomaltose layers are discussed by analysis of molecular modeling, oligomaltose and hexanoyl chain densities, and surfactant stability.
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