Dewetting of Polymer Films Controlled by Protein Adsorption

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Abstract

The stability of the film poly(n-butyl methacrylate) (PnBMA) with different tacticities, prepared on silicon oxide and exposed to aqueous phosphate-buffered saline with different concentrations of bovine serum albumin (CBSA between 0 and 4.5 mg/mL), was examined at temperatures close to the physiological limit (between 4 and 37 °C) with optical microscopy, contact angle measurements, atomic force microscopy, and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry. For PBS solutions with CBSA = 0, the stability of atactic PnBMA and dewetting of isotactic PnBMA was observed, caused by the interplay between the stabilizing long-range dispersion forces and the destabilizing short-range polar interactions. Analogous considerations of excess free energy cannot explain the retardation of dewetting observed for isotactic PnBMA in PBS solutions with higher CBSA. Instead, formation of a BSA overlayer, adsorbed preferentially but not exclusively to uncovered SiOx regions, is evidenced and postulated to hinder polymer dewetting. Polymer dewetting and protein patterning are obtained in one step, suggesting a simple approach to fabricate biomaterials with micropatterned proteins.

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Janiszewska, N., Raczkowska, J., Budkowski, A., Gajos, K., Stetsyshyn, Y., Michalik, M., & Awsiuk, K. (2020). Dewetting of Polymer Films Controlled by Protein Adsorption. Langmuir, 36(40), 11817–11828. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c01718

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