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Effect of Surface Morphology and Charge on the Amount and Conformation of Fibrinogen Adsorbed onto Alginate/Chitosan Microcapsules

Authors :
Jing Zhu
Wei Y. Xie
Xiu D. Liu
Hong G. Xie
Xiao J. Ma
Jia N. Zheng
Xiao X. Li
Feng Wang
Source :
Langmuir. 26:5587-5594
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2009.

Abstract

We report the influence of surface morphology and charge of alginate/chitosan (ACA) microcapsules on both the amount of adsorbed protein and its secondary structural changes during adsorption. Variations in surface morphology and charge were controlled by varying alginate molecular weight and chitosan concentration. Plasma fibrinogen (Fgn) was chosen to model this adsorption to foreign surfaces. The surface of ACA microcapsules exhibited a granular structure after incubating calcium alginate beads with chitosan solution to form membranes. The surface roughness of ACA microcapsule membranes decreased with decreasing alginate molecular weight and chitosan concentration. Zeta potential measurements showed that there was a net negative charge on the surface of ACA microcapsules which decreased with decreasing alginate molecular weight and chitosan concentration. The increase in both surface roughness and zeta potential resulted in an increase in the amount of Fgn adsorbed. Moreover, the higher the zeta potential was, the stronger the protein-surface interaction between fibrinogen and ACA microcapsules was. More protein molecules adsorbed spread and had a greater conformational change on rougher surfaces for more surfaces being available for protein to attach.

Details

ISSN :
15205827 and 07437463
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Langmuir
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9c0da4163574bfc710e0c550f4d7a065
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/la903874g