4.7 Article

Interfacial Modeling of Fibrinogen Adsorption onto LiNbO3 Single Crystal-Single Domain Surfaces

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22115946

Keywords

LiNbO3; fibrinogen; adsorption; molecular dynamics; biosensor; XPS

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Experimental and multi-scale molecular modeling approaches were used to study the adsorption of FBG on LNO surfaces, showing an increase in adsorption with increasing solution concentration independent of charges. The presence of solvated medium influenced the adsorption phenomenon due to the negative surface potential.
For the development of next-generation protein-based biosensor surfaces, it is important to understand how functional proteins, such as fibrinogen (FBG), interact with polar substrate surfaces in order to prepare highly sensitive points of medical care diagnostics. FBG, which is a fibrous protein with an extracellular matrix, has both positively and negatively charged regions on its 3-dimensional surface, which makes interpreting how it effectively binds to polarized surfaces challenging. In this study, single-crystal LiNbO3 (LNO) substrates that have surface charges were used to investigate the adsorption of FBG protruding polar fragments on the positively and negatively charged LNO surfaces. We performed a combination of experiments and multi-scale molecular modeling to understand the binding of FBG in vacuum and water-solvated surfaces of LNO. XPS measurements showed that the FBG adsorption on LNO increased with increment in solution concentration on surfaces independent of charges. Multi-scale molecular modeling employing Quantum Mechanics, Monte Carlo, and Molecular Mechanics addressed the phenomenon of FBG fragment bonding on LNO surfaces. The binding simulation validated the experimental observation using zeta potential measurements which showed presence of solvated medium influenced the adsorption phenomenon due to the negative surface potential.

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