| Literature DB >> 35060581 |
Gnanasekar Sathishkumar1, Kasi Gopinath1, Kai Zhang1, En-Tang Kang1,2, Liqun Xu1,3, Yunlong Yu4,5.
Abstract
Medical devices and surgical implants are necessary for tissue engineering and regenerative medicines. However, the biofouling and microbial colonization on the implant surface continues to be a major concern, which is difficult to eradicate and typically necessitates either antibiotic therapy or implant removal. As a result, efficient and eco-friendly bioinspired coating strategies for tethering functional materials or molecules on different medical substrates are highly desirable, especially for endowing versatile surface functionalities. Tannic acid (TA), a well-known tea stain polyphenol, has a good affinity for various substrates and actively inhibits the adhesion and colonization of microbes. Thus, functionalization of polymers, nanomaterials, metal-phenolic networks (MPNs), and proteins using TA bestows the end-products with unique binding or anchoring abilities on various implantable surfaces. This review addresses the recent advancements in the essential biomedical perspective of TA-based bioinspired universal surface coating technologies by focusing on their intrinsic features and ability to produce engineered functional composites. Further, the possible contributions of TA-based composites in antifouling and antibacterial applications on various biomedical substrates are outlined.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35060581 DOI: 10.1039/d1tb02073k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Chem B ISSN: 2050-750X Impact factor: 6.331