Developing new implant surfaces with anti-adhesion bacterial properties used for medical devices remains a challenge. Here we describe a novel study investigating nanotopography influences on bacterial adhesion on surfaces with controlled interspatial nanopillar distances. The surfaces were coated with proteins (fibrinogen, collagen, serum and saliva) prior to E. coli-WT adhesion under flow conditions. PiFM provided chemical mapping and showed that proteins adsorbed both between and onto the nanopillars with a preference for areas between the nanopillars. E. coli-WT adhered least to protein-coated areas with low surface nanopillar coverage, most to surfaces coated with saliva, while human serum led to the lowest adhesion. Protein-coated nanostructured surfaces affected the adhesion of E. coli-WT.
Protein-coated nanostructured surfaces affect the adhesion of Escherichia coli.
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作者:Kallas Pawel, Valen HÃ¥kon, Hulander Mats, Gadegaard Nikolaj, Stormonth-Darling John, O'Reilly Padraic, Thiede Bernd, Andersson Martin, Haugen HÃ¥vard Jostein
| 期刊: | Nanoscale | 影响因子: | 5.100 |
| 时间: | 2022 | 起止号: | 2022 May 26; 14(20):7736-7746 |
| doi: | 10.1039/d2nr00976e | ||
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