4.8 Article

Inhibition of bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation by a textured fluorinated alkoxyphosphazene surface

Journal

BIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 447-459

Publisher

KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bioactmat.2020.08.027

Keywords

Fluorinated polyphosphazene; Textured surface; Crosslinking; Anti-bacterial adhesion; Anti-biofilms; Microbial infection

Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease of NIH [R21 AI139706]

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The research findings demonstrate that modifying the surface of improved fluorinated alkoxyphosphazene materials with ordered pillars enhances antibacterial properties and reduces bacterial adhesion coefficient. Furthermore, textured X-OFP biomaterials showed no biofilm formation, indicating a significant improvement in biocompatibility and reduction of pathogenic infection risk.
The utilization of biomaterials in implanted blood-contacting medical devices often induces a persistent problem of microbial infection, which results from bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation on the surface of biomaterials. In this research, we developed new fluorinated alkoxyphosphazene materials, specifically poly[bis(octafluoropentoxy) phosphazene] (OFP) and crosslinkable OFP (X-OFP), with improved mechanical properties, and further modified the surface topography with ordered pillars to improve the antibacterial properties. Three X-OFP materials, X-OFP3.3, X-OFP8.1, X-OFP13.6, with different crosslinking densities were synthesized, and textured films with patterns of 500/500/600 nm (diameter/spacing/height) were fabricated via a two stage soft lithography molding process. Experiments with 3 bacterial strains: Staphylococcal epidermidis, Staphylococcal aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa showed that bacterial adhesion coefficients were significantly lower on OFP and X-OFP smooth surfaces than on the polyurethane biomaterial, and surface texturing further reduced bacterial adhesion due to the reduction in accessible surface contact area. Furthermore the anti-bacterial adhesion effect shows a positive relationship with the crosslinking degree. Biofilm formation on the substrates was examined using a CDC biofilm reactor for 7 days and no biofilm formation was observed on textured X-OFP biomaterials. The results suggested that the combination of fluorocarbon chemistry and submicron topography modification in textured X-OFP materials may provide a practical approach to improve the biocompatibility of current biomaterials with significant reduction in risk of pathogenic infection.

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