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Bovine serum albumin adsorption on titania surfaces and its relation to wettability aspects

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part A

Valagão Amadeu Do Serro, A.P.; Catarino Fernandes, A.; Norde, W.1999

Key information

Authors:

Valagão Amadeu Do Serro, A.P. (Ana Paula Valagão Amadeu do Serro); Catarino Fernandes, A. (Anabela Catarino Fernandes); De Jesus Vieira Saramago, B. (Benilde de Jesus Vieira Saramago); Norde, W.

Published in

1999

Abstract

The adsorption of bovine serum albumin (BSA) from sodium chloride solution and Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) onto TiO2-silicon surfaces is studied by reflectometry in stagnation point flow. The results are compared with those obtained by dynamic contact-angle (DCA) analysis of titanium substrates. The adsorption isotherms show that the adsorbed amount of protein always is lower in HBSS, that is, in the presence of calcium and phosphate ions. This may be related to the increase in surface hydrophilicity caused by these ions, as suggested by the authors in previous works. The rate of adsorption also is lower in HBSS solutions. Comparison of the initial adsorption rates with the rate of mass transfer to the surface reveals that in both solvents only a small fraction of the protein that arrives at the surface adsorbs onto it. Electrostatic and/or conformational effects can explain the energy barrier to adsorption. The DCA analysis of high concentration (4 mg/mL) protein solutions shows a strong reduction of the contact-angle hysteresis, both in HBSS and in NaCl solutions, which confirms that the immediate adsorption of the protein to the surface forms a stable, hydrophilic film.

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Title of the publication container

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part A

First page or article number

376

Last page

381

Volume

46

Issue

3

Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)

materials-engineering - Materials engineering

Publication language (ISO code)

eng - English

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