Publication | Closed Access
Protein Spreading Kinetics at Liquid−Solid Interfaces via an Adsorption Probe Method
88
Citations
33
References
2005
Year
Adsorption Probe MethodLiquid−solid InterfacesInterfacial ProcessInterface ChemistryEngineeringAveraged Area RelaxationsSurface FunctionalizationSurface ChemistryProtein FoldingInterfacial PhenomenonSurface ScienceAdsorption Probe ApproachInterfacial StudyMedicineBiophysicsBiomolecular Engineering
We report the areal growth kinetics of fibrinogen adsorbed on model hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces measured via an adsorption probe method. This approach exploits the adsorption of probe molecules to determine the evolution of fibrinogen test molecules under conditions where the fibrinogen test molecules adsorb at relatively dilute surface conditions, minimizing interactions between them. It is found that fibrinogen test molecules spread from an average initial footprint of 100 nm2 to a final footprint near 500 nm2 per molecule on the hydrophobic surface, with a single-exponential decay of 1735 s. On a hydrophilic monolayer, the area increases from 100 to 160 nm2 with a characteristic time of 6740 s. These results demonstrate the power of the adsorption probe approach and comprise the first measurements of the averaged area relaxations of adsorbed proteins. The observation of single-exponential dynamics is remarkable, given the extensive relaxation on the hydrophobic surface, which must involve fibrinogen denaturing.
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