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Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality

[Image: see text] In nanobiotechnology, the importance of controlling interactions between biological molecules and surfaces is paramount. In recent years, many devices based on nanostructured silicon materials have been presented, such as nanopores and nanochannels. However, there is still a clear...

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Autores principales: Andersson, John, Järlebark, Julia, KK, Sriram, Schaefer, Andreas, Hailes, Rebekah, Palasingh, Chonnipa, Santoso, Bagus, Vu, Van-Truc, Huang, Chun-Jun, Westerlund, Fredrik, Dahlin, Andreas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9951205/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36765467
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c21168
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author Andersson, John
Järlebark, Julia
KK, Sriram
Schaefer, Andreas
Hailes, Rebekah
Palasingh, Chonnipa
Santoso, Bagus
Vu, Van-Truc
Huang, Chun-Jun
Westerlund, Fredrik
Dahlin, Andreas
author_facet Andersson, John
Järlebark, Julia
KK, Sriram
Schaefer, Andreas
Hailes, Rebekah
Palasingh, Chonnipa
Santoso, Bagus
Vu, Van-Truc
Huang, Chun-Jun
Westerlund, Fredrik
Dahlin, Andreas
author_sort Andersson, John
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] In nanobiotechnology, the importance of controlling interactions between biological molecules and surfaces is paramount. In recent years, many devices based on nanostructured silicon materials have been presented, such as nanopores and nanochannels. However, there is still a clear lack of simple, reliable, and efficient protocols for preventing and controlling biomolecule adsorption in such structures. In this work, we show a simple method for passivation or selective biofunctionalization of silica, without the need for polymerization reactions or vapor-phase deposition. The surface is simply exposed stepwise to three different chemicals over the course of ∼1 h. First, the use of aminopropylsilatrane is used to create a monolayer of amines, yielding more uniform layers than conventional silanization protocols. Second, a cross-linker layer and click chemistry are used to make the surface reactive toward thiols. In the third step, thick and dense poly(ethylene glycol) brushes are prepared by a grafting-to approach. The modified surfaces are shown to be superior to existing options for silica modification, exhibiting ultralow fouling (a few ng/cm(2)) after exposure to crude serum. In addition, by including a fraction of biotinylated polymer end groups, the surface can be functionalized further. We show that avidin can be detected label-free from a serum solution with a selectivity (compared to nonspecific binding) of more than 98% without the need for a reference channel. Furthermore, we show that our method can passivate the interior of 150 nm × 100 nm nanochannels in silica, showing complete elimination of adsorption of a sticky fluorescent protein. Additionally, our method is shown to be compatible with modifications of solid-state nanopores in 20 nm thin silicon nitride membranes and reduces the noise in the ion current. We consider these findings highly important for the broad field of nanobiotechnology, and we believe that our method will be very useful for a great variety of surface-based sensors and analytical devices.
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spelling pubmed-99512052023-02-25 Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality Andersson, John Järlebark, Julia KK, Sriram Schaefer, Andreas Hailes, Rebekah Palasingh, Chonnipa Santoso, Bagus Vu, Van-Truc Huang, Chun-Jun Westerlund, Fredrik Dahlin, Andreas ACS Appl Mater Interfaces [Image: see text] In nanobiotechnology, the importance of controlling interactions between biological molecules and surfaces is paramount. In recent years, many devices based on nanostructured silicon materials have been presented, such as nanopores and nanochannels. However, there is still a clear lack of simple, reliable, and efficient protocols for preventing and controlling biomolecule adsorption in such structures. In this work, we show a simple method for passivation or selective biofunctionalization of silica, without the need for polymerization reactions or vapor-phase deposition. The surface is simply exposed stepwise to three different chemicals over the course of ∼1 h. First, the use of aminopropylsilatrane is used to create a monolayer of amines, yielding more uniform layers than conventional silanization protocols. Second, a cross-linker layer and click chemistry are used to make the surface reactive toward thiols. In the third step, thick and dense poly(ethylene glycol) brushes are prepared by a grafting-to approach. The modified surfaces are shown to be superior to existing options for silica modification, exhibiting ultralow fouling (a few ng/cm(2)) after exposure to crude serum. In addition, by including a fraction of biotinylated polymer end groups, the surface can be functionalized further. We show that avidin can be detected label-free from a serum solution with a selectivity (compared to nonspecific binding) of more than 98% without the need for a reference channel. Furthermore, we show that our method can passivate the interior of 150 nm × 100 nm nanochannels in silica, showing complete elimination of adsorption of a sticky fluorescent protein. Additionally, our method is shown to be compatible with modifications of solid-state nanopores in 20 nm thin silicon nitride membranes and reduces the noise in the ion current. We consider these findings highly important for the broad field of nanobiotechnology, and we believe that our method will be very useful for a great variety of surface-based sensors and analytical devices. American Chemical Society 2023-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9951205/ /pubmed/36765467 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c21168 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Andersson, John
Järlebark, Julia
KK, Sriram
Schaefer, Andreas
Hailes, Rebekah
Palasingh, Chonnipa
Santoso, Bagus
Vu, Van-Truc
Huang, Chun-Jun
Westerlund, Fredrik
Dahlin, Andreas
Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title_full Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title_fullStr Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title_full_unstemmed Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title_short Polymer Brushes on Silica Nanostructures Prepared by Aminopropylsilatrane Click Chemistry: Superior Antifouling and Biofunctionality
title_sort polymer brushes on silica nanostructures prepared by aminopropylsilatrane click chemistry: superior antifouling and biofunctionality
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9951205/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36765467
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c21168
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