Inhibition of bacteria adhesion and biofilm formation using a precisely structured nitric oxide-releasing coating with repeatedly renewing antimicrobial and antifouling ability
Applied Materials Today, ISSN: 2352-9407, Vol: 41, Page: 102468
2024
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Studies Conducted at Qingdao University of Science and Technology on Applied Materials Recently Reported (Inhibition of Bacteria Adhesion and Biofilm Formation Using a Precisely Structured Nitric Oxide-releasing Coating With Repeatedly Renewing ...)
2024 DEC 04 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Tech Daily News -- Investigators publish new report on Materials Research - Applied
Article Description
Bacterial adhesion and colonization usually causes the formation of biofilm that cannot be easily eradicated by common antibiotics and disinfectants. Surface covalent immobilization of nitric oxide (NO)-releasing polymer is an effective surface modification strategy to combat the threat from bacteria. Although surface covalent strategy avoided the leaching of toxic NO donors, the existence of hydrophobic NO donors on topsurface could inevitably accelerate the microorganism adhesion and accumulation, and the NO-releasing period of time was still very limited. In this work, we prepared an antimicrobial and antibiofilm surface via tethering a precision-structured NO-releasing copolymer brush to an organic-inorganic hybrid hard coating (> 5H pencil hardness) on one end. The precision-structured diblock copolymer brush was composed of a surface antifouling block and a subsurface antimicrobial block of NO-releasing units. A typical effect of “kill two birds with one stone” was observed, the NO releasing subsurface segment within a polymeric matrix prolongs NO release while also preventing surface fouling caused by hydrophobic NO donors on top surface. The impacts of polymer architecture on bioactivity was detailed investigated, and the block copolymer brush exhibited the optimal inhibitory effects against bacteria colonization and biofilm formation. The developed bioactive diblock copolymer brush was grafted from a hard hybrid persistent coating that embeds considerable initiation sites for surface modification. Thanks to the presence of initiator throughout the hybrid network, the initiation layer could initiate polymerization repeatedly after the polymer brushes are worn off at high pressure. Thus, the coating exhibited repeatedly renewing antimicrobial and antifouling ability after multiple abrasion cycles. This work not only developed a novel strategy for regulating NO releasing via modulating the polymer architecture, but provided a feasible route for obtaining a robust initiator layer for synthesizing polymer brush for antimicrobial and antifouling applications.
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Elsevier BV
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