4.8 Article

Easy Come Easy Go: Surfaces Containing Immobilized Nanoparticles or Isolated Polycation Chains Facilitate Removal of Captured Staphylococcus aureus by Retarding Bacterial Bond Maturation

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 1180-1190

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn405845y

Keywords

residence time dependence; contact time; charge cluster; immobilized nanoparticles; low fouling antimicrobial surfaces; surface heterogeneity; charge heterogeneity; polymer brush; immobilized nanoparticles; evolution of adhesion; interfacial relaxation; bacterial removal

Funding

  1. Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing at UMass, NSF [1025020]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1025020] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Adhesion of bacteria is a key step in the functioning of antimicrobial surfaces or certain types of on-line sensors. The subsequent removal of these bacteria, within a similar to 10-30 min time frame, is equally important but complicated by the tendency of bacterial adhesion to strengthen within minutes of initial capture. This study uses Staphylococcus aureus as a model bacterium to demonstrate the general strategy of clustering adhesive surface functionality (at length scales smaller than the bacteria themselves) on otherwise nonadhesive surfaces to capture and retain bacteria (easy come) while limiting the progressive strengthening of adhesion. The loose attachment facilitates bacteria removal by moderate shearing flow (easy go). This strategy is demonstrated using surfaces containing sparsely and randomly arranged immobilized amine-functionalized nanoparticles or poly-L-lysine chains, about 10 nm in size. The rest of the surface is backfilled with a nonadhesive polyethylene glycol (PEG) brush that, by itself, repels S. aureus. The nanoparticles or polymer chains cluster cationic functionality, providing small regions that attract negatively charged S. aureus cells. Compared with surfaces of nearly uniform cationic character where S. aureus adhesion quickly becomes strong (on a time scale less than 5 min), placement of cationic charge in small clusters retards or prevents processes that increase bacteria adhesion on a time scale of similar to 30 min, providing easy go surfaces.

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