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Lubricin: a versatile, biological anti-adhesive with properties comparable to polyethylene glycol
journal contribution
posted on 2015-06-01, 00:00 authored by Wren Greene, L L Martin, R F Tabor, Agnes MichalczykAgnes Michalczyk, Leigh Ackland, Roger HornLubricin is a glycoprotein found in articular joints which has been recognized as being an important biological boundary lubricant molecule. Besides providing lubrication, we demonstrate, using a quartz crystal microbalance, that lubricin also exhibits anti-adhesive properties and is highly effective at preventing the non-specific adsorption of representative globular proteins and constituents of blood plasma. This impressive anti-adhesive property, combined with lubricin's ability to readily self-assemble to form dense, highly stable telechelic polymer brush layers on virtually any substrates, and its innate biocompatibility, makes it an attractive candidate for anti-adhesive and anti-fouling coatings. We show that coatings of lubricin protein are as effective as, or better than, self-assembled monolayers of polyethylene glycol over a wide range of pH and that this provides a simple, versatile, highly stable, and highly effective method of controlling unwanted adhesion to surfaces.
History
Journal
BiomaterialsVolume
53Pagination
127 - 136Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
eISSN
1878-5905Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2015, ElsevierUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Anti-adhesionBiofoulingLubricinNon-specific bindingQuartz crystal microbalanceSurface treatmentScience & TechnologyTechnologyEngineering, BiomedicalMaterials Science, BiomaterialsEngineeringMaterials ScienceNONSPECIFIC PROTEIN ADSORPTIONQUARTZ-CRYSTAL MICROBALANCECELL-ADHESIONBOUNDARY LUBRICATIONHYALURONIC-ACIDMODEL SURFACESPOLYMER-FILMSMUCINLAYERSWEAR