| Literature DB >> 33805137 |
Jacopo Barberi1, Silvia Spriano1.
Abstract
Titanium and its alloys, specially Ti6Al4V, are among the most employed materials in orthopedic and dental implants. Cells response and osseointegration of implant devices are strongly dependent on the body-biomaterial interface zone. This interface is mainly defined by proteins: They adsorb immediately after implantation from blood and biological fluids, forming a layer on implant surfaces. Therefore, it is of utmost importance to understand which features of biomaterials surfaces influence formation of the protein layer and how to guide it. In this paper, relevant literature of the last 15 years about protein adsorption on titanium-based materials is reviewed. How the surface characteristics affect protein adsorption is investigated, aiming to provide an as comprehensive a picture as possible of adsorption mechanisms and type of chemical bonding with the surface, as well as of the characterization techniques effectively applied to model and real implant surfaces. Surface free energy, charge, microroughness, and hydroxylation degree have been found to be the main surface parameters to affect the amount of adsorbed proteins. On the other hand, the conformation of adsorbed proteins is mainly dictated by the protein structure, surface topography at the nano-scale, and exposed functional groups. Protein adsorption on titanium surfaces still needs further clarification, in particular concerning adsorption from complex protein solutions. In addition, characterization techniques to investigate and compare the different aspects of protein adsorption on different surfaces (in terms of roughness and chemistry) shall be developed.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; cell interactions; protein adsorption; surface modifications; titanium
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805137 PMCID: PMC8037091 DOI: 10.3390/ma14071590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Effects of the physiochemical properties of material surfaces on various aspects of protein adsorption (amount, binding strength, orientation, conformation). Reprinted with permission from ref. [25]. Copyright 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co.
Main parameters affecting protein adsorption on surfaces.
| Parameters | General Rules of Thumb | |
|---|---|---|
| Surface | Topography/roughness | Higher surface roughness ≥ higher amount of adsorbed proteins |
| Hydrophobicity (non-polar surfaces) | Higher hydrophobicity ≥ higher amount of adsorbed proteins and denaturation degree; hydrophobic interaction as adsorption mechanism | |
| Chemistry | Influence on the surface charge | |
| Protein | Amino acid chain | Affects structural stability |
| Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity | Surface charges and non-polar residues are always present; they can be differently arranged according to the environment; hydrophobic residues interact with hydrophobic surfaces | |
| Charge | Higher amount of adsorbed proteins at IEP | |
| Molecular weight | Small proteins adsorb quicker | |
| Structural stability | Soft proteins change easier configuration and adsorb larger on hydrophilic surfaces; denaturation can enhance or reduce biological activity | |
| Solution | pH | Affects surface charge of both proteins and surfaces |
| Ionic strength | Adsorbed ions reduce repulsive effects among proteins; some ions compete with proteins for adsorption | |
| Protein concentration | Higher protein concentration higher amount of adsorption | |
| Protein mixture(single, binary or more complex) | Vroman effect | |
| Temperature | Higher temperature ≥ faster kinetics of adsorption |
Figure 2Scheme of hydroxylation of Ti surface and surface charge generation during contact with aqueous solutions.
Figure 3Normalized adsorption profile of bovine serum albumin (BSA) (black) and fibrinogen (FIB) (blue) on Ti with roughness gradient (left y-axes). The overlaid red lines are the SAR profile (a) and the curvature profile (b) (right y-axes). Adapted with permission from ref. [76]. Copyright 2011 Elsevier B.V.
Figure 4Correlation of FN adsorption with roughness (a) and surface free energy (SFE) (b) on cp-Ti blasted with different particles: S, SiC particles; A, Al2O3 particels; 3, particles of 212–300 µm; 6, 425–600 µm. Adapted with permission from ref. [100]. Copyright 2009 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Figure 5Fluorescent image of BSA adsorbed onto a patterned nanostructured surface: The protein is adsorbed on zones with titanium nanoneedles (red) and not in the zones, which were irradiated with laser. Adapted with permission from ref. [119]. Copyright 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Figure 6Spatial distribution of albumin and histone adsorbed on titania nanotubes reconstructed by different techniques: Time of flight-secondary ion mass spectroscopy (ToF-SIMS) (1–3 nm depth); X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) (3–10 nm depth); Tof-SIMS depth profile (from 10 nm to bottom). Reprinted with permission from ref. [128]. Copyright 2016 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Figure 7Adsorption of different proteins on Titania Nanotube (TNT) substrates with different crystalline phase: AM, amorphous; AN, pure anatase; AN/R, mainly anatase with rutile presence; R, pure rutile. Statistical difference by ANOVA: **ρ < 0.01 and *ρ < 0.05. Reprinted with permission from ref. [177]. Copyright 2019, King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology.
Figure 8Schematic representation of UV effects on protein adsorption and cell attachment: (a) Removal of hydrocarbon contamination results in increased protein adsorption and osteoblast adhesion and spreading, adapted from ref. [186]; (b) effect of number and type of UV-generated OH groups on protein conformation and subsequent mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) proliferation, adapted with permission from ref. [187]. Copyright 2017 The Royals Society of Chemistry.
Figure 9BSA adsorption on TiO2 thin film at different pH values: 3.55 (■), 4.60 (●), 5.60 (▲), and 7.51 (▼). Reprinted with permission from ref. [208]. Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V.
Figure 10Adsorption on cp-Ti from BSA-LYS mixture: Relative amounts of adsorbed proteins form mixtures with different ratios (BSA: LYS 100:0, 75:25, 50:50, 25:75, 0:100) at different pH, 4.5 (a), 7.0 (b) (amount is expressed as percentage of adsorbed protein from a pure solution); LYS enzymatic activity, relative to pure LYS solution, in mixture with BSA and after adsorption from same mixture (c). Adapted with permission from ref. [222]. Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V.
Characterization techniques commonly used for protein investigation on titanium-based surface. The output about protein adsorption, the kind of substrates that can be analyzed, the possibility of in situ (without protein detachment) and real-time measurement, and main advantages and drawbacks are reported.
| Technique | Output | Substrate | In Situ/Real Time | Advantages | Drawbacks | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labeled proteins | 125I-labeling | Quantification | Any | Yes/no | Direct quantification | Change of protein properties, handling issues | [ |
| Fluorescent labeling | Quantification and imaging | Any | Yes/no | Direct quantification, competitive adsorption evaluation | Change of protein properties, expensive reagents | [ | |
| UV-vis spectroscopy | BCA | Quantification | Any | No/no | Low cost, large range of concentrations | Protein detachment needed | [ |
| Bradford assay | Quantification | Any | No/no | Low time consume | Protein detachment needed, sensible to surfactant | [ | |
| Spectrophotometry (λ = 280 nm) | Quantification | Any | No/no | No reactant needed | Protein detachment needed, inaccurate with complex samples | [ | |
| Labeled antibodies | Quantification, protein recognition and imaging | Any | Yes/no | Targeting of specific proteins | Time consuming, specific reagents | [ | |
| ELISA | Quantification and protein recognition | Any | Yes/no | High specificity | Time consuming, specific reagents | [ | |
| Gel electrophoresis | Western blot | Quantification and protein recognition | Any | No/no | No toxic chemicals | Sample preparation, poor band separation | [ |
| SDS-PAGE | Quantification and protein recognition | Any | No/no | High sensitivity, small samples needed | Poor band resolution, toxic chemicals | [ | |
| LC-EIS-MS/MS | Proteomic analysis | Any | No/no | High specificity and sensitivity | High costs | [ | |
| XPS | Quantification, protein-surface interaction | Any | Yes/no | High sensitivity, simultaneous evaluation of surface chemistry, depth profiling | No absolute quantification, complex data analysis | [ | |
| Tof-SIMS | Quantification, protein recognition | Any | Yes/no | High sensitivity, possible orientation and conformation analysis, depth profiling | No absolute quantification, complex data analysis | [ | |
| WSD | Quantification | Any | Yes/no | Sensitive to a wide range of protein surface concentration | Thorough calibration needed | [ | |
| AFM | Imaging, adhesion forces, conformation | Flat substrates | Yes/no | High resolution, customizable tip | Low throughput, time consuming | [ | |
| CLSM | Imaging, relative quantification | Any | Yes/no | High resolution, 3D distribution into surface features | Expensive reagents | [ | |
| TEM | Imaging, thickness measurement | Any | Yes/no | Direct visualization of protein layer | Complex sample preparation | [ | |
| Zeta potential | Adsorption evaluation, protein conformation | Powder or planar samples | Yes/no | Simple measurement | No protein recognition, preliminary information needed | [ | |
| QCM | Quantification, viscoelastic properties of layer, changes in conformation | Sputtered sensors | Yes/Yes | High sensitivity, real time measurement, possibility to change the uptake solution | Co-adsorbed solvent weighted. Mass calculation affected by energy dissipation | [ | |
| FTIR (ATR) | Secondary structure, relative quantification | Planar samples | Yes/no | Very specific protein band | Not highly sensitive, data deconvolution needed | [ | |
| Raman spectroscopy | Secondary structure, relative quantification | Any | Yes/no | Very specific protein band | Not highly sensitive, complex data interpretation | [ | |
| SE | Layer thickness measurement | Flat surfaces | Yes/yes | High sensitivity, low cost, fast measurement | Difficult optical modeling of rough and structured surfaces | [ | |
| SFS | Protein conformation | Any | Yes/no | Sensitive, high selectivity towards specific amino acids | Possible instrument artifacts | [ | |
| EIS | Layer evolution, protein-surface interactions | Planar samples | Yes/yes | High sensitivity, possible to study adsorption in different condition | Complex modelling and data interpretation | [ | |
| CD | Protein conformation | Planar samples | Yes/no | Specific bands for secondary structures | Band deconvolution needed | [ | |
Effect of titanium surface properties on protein adsorption (amount of adsorbed proteins, protein conformation on surface, and mechanism of protein–surface interaction) and impact of each feature on adsorption. ≈: no clear impact; ↑: mild impact; ↑↑: high impact; n.r.: effect not reported.
| Surface Characteristic | Impact on Protein Adsorption | Conformation | Mechanism | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microroughness | ↑ | n.r. | Higher interaction area, physical adsorption | SLA surfaces adsorb fourfold more of albumin, fibronectin, fibrinogen and immunoglobulin vs. untreated surface because of roughness. |
| Nanoroughness | ≈ | ↑ | Dependent on other characteristics. Aspect ratio of nanofeatures can influence protein conformation. | BSA aggregates into nanopores larger than its hydrodynamic radius with a strong interaction with the surface, while FN is too large. |
| Hydroxylation | ↑↑ | ↑↑ | According to the specific adsorbed proteins, OH can promote or hinder interaction with the surface | BSA adorbs through hydrogen bonding and proton transfer with interaction with OH surface groups. |
| SFE | ↑↑ | n.r. | High surface energy, in particular the polar component, increases adsorption | Ti adsorbs larger amount of plasma proteins vs. other metals with lower SFE, but TiO2 adsorbs less proteins and in a weaker manner than other oxides with higher SFE. |
| Charge | ↑↑ | ↑ | Can promote or limit protein adsorption, depending on charge of both surface and proteins | BSA is adsorbed in a lower amount on negatively charged surfaces while it is the opposite for histone that is positively charged. |
| Chemistry (alloying metals, ions) | ↑ | n.r. | Increase protein adsorption, divalent ions in particular | TiNi alloys results in lower BSA (dependent on Ni content), FIB, and FN adsorption vs. cp-Ti. |