Controlling the carbon-bio interface: ex-situ and in-situ studies of fundamental biomolecule--carbon reactions
Citation:
ZEN, FEDERICO, Controlling the carbon-bio interface: ex-situ and in-situ studies of fundamental biomolecule--carbon reactions, Controlling the Carbon-Bio Interface: ex-situ and in-situ Studies of Fundamental Biomolecule-Carbon Interactions, Trinity College Dublin.School of Chemistry.CHEMISTRY, 2017Download Item:
Abstract:
Carbon materials and nanomaterials are of great interest for biological
applications such as implantable apparatus and nanoparticle vectors. In
particular, amorphous carbon is extensively used as coating for biomedical
devices because of a combination of desirable physical/chemical properties that
underpin their good performances. However, an explanation of the
biocompatibility of carbon-coated devices has not yet been found. Importance in
the interaction of biomaterials with biological fluids and tissues has been credited
to the events taking place during the initial stages of surface conditioning. Proteins
and lipids are examples of biomolecules first adsorbing at the surface after
implantation. Therefore, to realize the potential of carbon biomaterials it is critical
to control formation and composition of the protein corona in biological media.
In this thesis an investigation into the protein interfacial interactions at
different amorphous carbon surfaces is reported. A detailed adsorption study of
albumin, lysozyme and fibrinogen was carried out at carbon surfaces
functionalized with aryldiazonium layers bearing mono- and di-saccharide
glycosides. Ex-situ results show that that glycan layers prevent unspecific protein
adsorption, in particular in the case of the tested di-saccharide. Antifouling
properties at phenylglycoside layers correlate positively with wetting behaviour
and Lewis basicity. The dynamic of protein adsorption were studied using a
combination of in-situ techniques: nanoplasmonic sensing were demonstrated to
be optimal for the comparative investigation of protein interactions at carbon
surfaces with dissimilar dielectric properties; results obtained by quartz crystal
microbalance measurements suggested that protein conformation at
carbohydrate layers likely differs from that at bare carbon.
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Author: ZEN, FEDERICO
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Controlling the Carbon-Bio Interface: ex-situ and in-situ Studies of Fundamental Biomolecule-Carbon InteractionsAdvisor:
Colavita, PaulaPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Chemistry. Discipline of ChemistryType of material:
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