| Literature DB >> 33310537 |
Victoria Albright1, Daniel Penarete-Acosta2, Mary Stack3, Jeremy Zheng2, Alexander Marin4, Hanna Hlushko1, Hongjun Wang5, Arul Jayaraman6, Alexander K Andrianov4, Svetlana A Sukhishvili7.
Abstract
Biocompatible antibacterial coatings are highly desirable to prevent bacterial colonization on a wide range of medical devices from hip implants to skin grafts. Traditional polyelectrolytes are unable to directly form coatings with cationic antibiotics at neutral pH and suffer from high degrees of antibiotic release upon exposure to physiological concentrations of salt. Here, novel inorganic-organic hybrid polymer coatings based on direct layer-by-layer assembly of anionic polyphosphazenes (PPzs) of various degrees of fluorination with cationic antibiotics (polymyxin B, colistin, gentamicin, and neomycin) are reported. The coatings displayed low levels of antibiotic release upon exposure to salt and pH-triggered response of controlled doses of antibiotics. Importantly, coatings remained highly surface active against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, even after 30 days of pre-exposure to physiological conditions (bacteria-free) or after repeated bacterial challenge. Moreover, coatings displayed low (<1%) hemolytic activity for both rabbit and porcine blood. Coatings deposited on either hard (Si wafers) or soft (electrospun fiber matrices) materials were non-toxic towards fibroblasts (NIH/3T3) and displayed controllable fibroblast adhesion via PPz fluorination degree. Finally, coatings showed excellent antibacterial activity in ex vivo pig skin studies. Taken together, these results suggest a new avenue to form highly tunable, biocompatible polymer coatings for medical device surfaces.Entities:
Keywords: Antibacterial; Fluoropolymers; Hemocompatible; Layer-by-layer; Polyphosphazenes; Self-defensive
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33310537 PMCID: PMC7855754 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120586
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479