4.8 Article

Nonleaching Bacteria-Responsive Antibacterial Surface Based on a Unique Hierarchical

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 8, Issue 37, Pages 24471-24481

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.6b08436

Keywords

cationic antimicrobial peptides; pH-responsive polymer; hierarchical architecture; bacteria-responsive; smart surfaces

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51473167, 51273200]

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Bacteria-responsive surfaces popularly exert their smart antibacterial activities by bacteria-triggered delivery of antibacterial agents; however, the antibacterial agents should be additionally reloaded for the renewal of these surfaces. Herein a teversible, nonleaching bacteria-responsive antibacterial surface is prepared by taking advantage of a hierarchical polymer brush architecture. In this hierarchical surface, a pH-responsive poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA), outer layer serves as an actuator modulating the surface behavior, on demand, while antimicrobial peptides (AMP) are covalently immobilized on the inner layer. The PMAA hydration layer renders the hierarchical surface resistant to initial bacterial attachment and biocompatible under physiological conditions. When bacteria colonize the surface, the bacteria-triggered acidification allows the outermost PMAA chains to collapse, therefore exposing the underlying bactericidal AMP to on-demand kill bacteria. In addition, the dead bacteria can be released once the PMAA chains resume, their hydrophilicity because of the environmental pH increase. The functionality of the nonleaching surface is reversible without additional reloading of the antibacterial agents. This approach provides a new methodology for the development of smart surfaces in a variety of practical biomedical applications.

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