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Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays

[Image: see text] Protein adsorption onto polymer surfaces is a very complex, ubiquitous, and integrated process, impacting essential areas of food processing and packaging, health devices, diagnostic tools, and medical products. The nature of protein–surface interactions is becoming much more compl...

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Autor principal: Hahm, Jong-in
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4148170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24456577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404481t
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author Hahm, Jong-in
author_facet Hahm, Jong-in
author_sort Hahm, Jong-in
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Protein adsorption onto polymer surfaces is a very complex, ubiquitous, and integrated process, impacting essential areas of food processing and packaging, health devices, diagnostic tools, and medical products. The nature of protein–surface interactions is becoming much more complicated with continuous efforts toward miniaturization, especially for the development of highly compact protein detection and diagnostic devices. A large body of literature reports on protein adsorption from the perspective of ensemble-averaged behavior on macroscopic, chemically homogeneous, polymeric surfaces. However, protein–surface interactions governing the nanoscale size regime may not be effectively inferred from their macroscopic and microscopic characteristics. Recently, research efforts have been made to produce periodically arranged, nanoscopic protein patterns on diblock copolymer surfaces solely through self-assembly. Intriguing protein adsorption phenomena are directly probed on the individual biomolecule level for a fundamental understanding of protein adsorption on nanoscale surfaces exhibiting varying degrees of chemical heterogeneity. Insight gained from protein assembly on diblock copolymers can be effectively used to control the surface density, conformation, orientation, and biofunctionality of prebound proteins in highly miniaturized applications, now approaching the nanoscale. This feature article will highlight recent experimental and theoretical advances made on these fronts while focusing on single-biomolecule-level investigations of protein adsorption behavior combined with surface chemical heterogeneity on the length scale commensurate with a single protein. This article will also address advantages and challenges of the self-assembly-driven patterning technology used to produce protein nanoarrays and its implications for ultrahigh density, functional, and quantifiable protein detection in a highly miniaturized format.
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spelling pubmed-41481702015-01-23 Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays Hahm, Jong-in Langmuir [Image: see text] Protein adsorption onto polymer surfaces is a very complex, ubiquitous, and integrated process, impacting essential areas of food processing and packaging, health devices, diagnostic tools, and medical products. The nature of protein–surface interactions is becoming much more complicated with continuous efforts toward miniaturization, especially for the development of highly compact protein detection and diagnostic devices. A large body of literature reports on protein adsorption from the perspective of ensemble-averaged behavior on macroscopic, chemically homogeneous, polymeric surfaces. However, protein–surface interactions governing the nanoscale size regime may not be effectively inferred from their macroscopic and microscopic characteristics. Recently, research efforts have been made to produce periodically arranged, nanoscopic protein patterns on diblock copolymer surfaces solely through self-assembly. Intriguing protein adsorption phenomena are directly probed on the individual biomolecule level for a fundamental understanding of protein adsorption on nanoscale surfaces exhibiting varying degrees of chemical heterogeneity. Insight gained from protein assembly on diblock copolymers can be effectively used to control the surface density, conformation, orientation, and biofunctionality of prebound proteins in highly miniaturized applications, now approaching the nanoscale. This feature article will highlight recent experimental and theoretical advances made on these fronts while focusing on single-biomolecule-level investigations of protein adsorption behavior combined with surface chemical heterogeneity on the length scale commensurate with a single protein. This article will also address advantages and challenges of the self-assembly-driven patterning technology used to produce protein nanoarrays and its implications for ultrahigh density, functional, and quantifiable protein detection in a highly miniaturized format. American Chemical Society 2014-01-23 2014-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4148170/ /pubmed/24456577 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404481t Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society Terms of Use (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html)
spellingShingle Hahm, Jong-in
Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title_full Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title_fullStr Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title_full_unstemmed Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title_short Fundamentals of Nanoscale Polymer–Protein Interactions and Potential Contributions to Solid-State Nanobioarrays
title_sort fundamentals of nanoscale polymer–protein interactions and potential contributions to solid-state nanobioarrays
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4148170/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24456577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404481t
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