| Literature DB >> 27326371 |
Vinod B Damodaran1, N Sanjeeva Murthy1.
Abstract
Contamination of biomedical devices in a biological medium, biofouling, is a major cause of infection and is entirely avoidable. This mini-review will coherently present the broad range of antifouling strategies, germicidal, preventive and cleaning using one or more of biological, chemical and physical techniques. These techniques will be discussed from the point of view of their ability to inhibit protein adsorption, usually the first step that eventually leads to fouling. Many of these approaches draw their inspiration from nature, such as emulating the nitric oxide production in endothelium, use of peptoids that mimic protein repellant peptides, zwitterionic functionalities found in membrane structures, and catechol functionalities used by mussel to immobilize poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). More intriguing are the physical modifications, creation of micropatterns on the surface to control the hydration layer, making them either superhydrophobic or superhydrophilic. This has led to technologies that emulate the texture of shark skin, and the superhyprophobicity of self-cleaning textures found in lotus leaves. The mechanism of antifouling in each of these methods is described, and implementation of these ideas is illustrated with examples in a way that could be adapted to prevent infection in medical devices.Entities:
Keywords: Antifouling; Bio-inspired; Biomaterials; DOPA; Hydration; Micropatterning; Nitric oxide; PEG; Peptoids; Zwitterions
Year: 2016 PMID: 27326371 PMCID: PMC4913429 DOI: 10.1186/s40824-016-0064-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomater Res ISSN: 1226-4601
Comparison of various antifouling strategies presented in this paper
| Antifouling strategy | Principle/Mechanism | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Biological molecules | |||
| 1.1 Nitric oxide-releasing materials | Oxidative or nitrosative stress-inducing moieties are produced within the biofilm structure to cause bacteriophage induction, and cell lysis. | Synthetic NO donor supplements the natural sources | Because of high reactivity (instability), storage and delivery requires special attention. |
| Selective to only certain bacterial types. | |||
| 1.2 Peptide and peptoid modified surfaces | Through structural reformations that inhibit cell adhesion. | Exceptional resistance to a wide variety of proteins. | High cost of peptide/peptoid modification of surfaces |
| Tailorable surface structure for optimum performance. | |||
| 2. Chemical modification | |||
| 2.1 Hydrophilic polymers | A layer of strongly bound water that cannot be displaced by a protein and thus inhibiting protein adsorption. | Uses poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), an U.S. federal drug administration (FDA) approved GRAS (generally recognized as safe) substance | Oxidative damages and low surface densities limit long-term application. |
| 2.2 Immobilization of PEG | Anchoring of PEG using a mussel-mimicking linker. | Less susceptible to hydrolytic degradation than free PEG | Limited by the availability of suitable surface functionalities for anchoring PEG |
| 2.3 Zwitterionic polymers | High protein resistance through the formation of “super-hydrophilicity”. | Long-term antifouling characteristics. | Limited commercial availability of zwitterionic polymers |
| Unique capability for ligand immobilization. | |||
| 2.4 Hydrophobic polymers | Inhibits the adsorption of proteins that require polar surfaces. | Many hydrophobic polymers are commercially available. | Toxicity concerns with many hydrophobic polymers. |
| 3. Micropatterning of surfaces | |||
| 3.1 Lotus-effect | Self-cleaning ability of the superhydrophobic surface prevents adhesion | A physical texture enhances the role of the simple waxy surface | Limited by fabrication techniques and general applicability |
| 3.2 Shark-skin patterns | Surface patterns along with an antifouling chemical agent sloughs of attached cells | A physical modification of the surface to enhance the effect of chemical agent | Limited by wide applicability. Applicable to moving surfaces. |
Fig. 1A model for NO regulation of c-di-GMP synthesis in S. woodyi suggested by Liu et al. Reproduced with permission from ref. [18] © American Chemical Society
Fig. 2Mechanism of β-lactamase-triggered NO release and biofilm dispersion by cephalosporin-3′-diazeniumdiolate. Adapted from ref. [21]
Fig. 3Structural details of a peptidomimetic polymer (PMP1). Reproduced with permission from ref. [36] © American Chemical Society
Fig. 4a Chemical structure of the triblock copolymer PDN-PEG-PDN and the diblock copolymer PDN-PEG. b Schematics of the preparation of surfaces bearing polymer brushes and polymer loops using drop coating method. Reproduced with permission from ref. [53] © Royal Society of Chemistry
Fig. 5a The uniform conical cells on superhydrophobic leaves of a lotus plant. Reproduced from ref. [96] © Ensikat et al. b Uniform cones on a laser ablated film of poly(ethylene terephthalate) that are hydrophilic [88]
Fig. 6Sharklet technologies mimicking the micropatterns on Shark skin. a Skin of a Bull Shark © AMNH/R. Rudolph. Reproduced with the permission from the American Museum of Natural History (enlarged from the original). b Topography mimicked in the Sharklet™ surface technology. Reproduced with the permission of Prof. Brennan, Biomedical Engineering, University of Florida