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Blood protein‐polymer adsorption: Implications for understanding complement‐mediated hemoincompatibility
Author(s) -
Engberg Anna E.,
RosengrenHolmberg Jenny P.,
Chen Hui,
Nilsson Bo,
Lambris John D.,
Nicholls Ian A.,
Ekdahl Kristi.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of biomedical materials research part a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.849
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1552-4965
pISSN - 1549-3296
DOI - 10.1002/jbm.a.33030
Subject(s) - materials science , adsorption , polymer , protein adsorption , complement (music) , complement system , chemical engineering , biophysics , polymer science , nanotechnology , composite material , biochemistry , immunology , organic chemistry , biology , chemistry , complementation , antibody , engineering , gene , phenotype
The aim of this study was to create polymeric materials with known properties to study the preconditions for complement activation. Initially, 22 polymers were screened for complement activating capacity. Based on these results, six polymers (P1–P6) were characterized regarding physico–chemical parameters, for example, composition, surface area, pore size, and protein adsorption from human EDTA‐plasma. P2, P4, and reference particles of polystyrene and polyvinyl chloride, were hydrophobic, bound low levels of protein and were poor complement activators. Their accessible surface was limited to protein adsorption in that they had pore diameters smaller than most plasma proteins. P1 and P3 were negatively charged and adsorbed IgG and C1q. A 10‐fold difference in complement activation was attributed to the fact that P3 but not P1 bound high amounts of C1‐inhibitor. The hydrophobic P5 and P6 were low complement activators. They selectively bound apolipoproteins AI and AIV (and vitronectin), which probably limited the binding of complement activators to the surface. We demonstrate the usefulness of the modus operandi to use a high‐throughput procedure to synthesize a great number of novel substances, assay their physico–chemical properties with the aim to study the relationship between the initial protein coat on a surface and subsequent biological events. Data obtained from the six polymers characterized here, suggest that a complement‐resistant surface should be hydrophobic, uncharged, and have a small available surface, accomplished by nanostructured topography. Additional attenuation of complement can be achieved by selective enrichment of inert proteins and inhibitors. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: , 2011.

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