Abstract
Gold is known to have good biocompatibility because of its inert activity and the surface property can be easily tailored with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). In previous works, gold surfaces were tailored with homogeneously mixed amine and carboxylic acid functional groups to generate surfaces with a series of isoelectronic points (IEPs). In other words, by tailoring the chemical composition in binary SAMs, different surface potentials can be obtained under controlled pH environments. To understand how the surface potentials affect the interaction at the interface, a binary-SAMs-modified Au electrode on a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation detection (QCM-D) was used owing to the high weight sensitivity of QCM-D. In QCM-D, the frequency shift and the energy dissipation are monitored simultaneously to determine the adsorption behaviors of the plasmid DNA to surfaces of various potentials in Tris-buffered NaCl solutions of different pH. The results revealed that the plasmid DNA can be adsorbed on the SAM-modified surfaces electrostatically; thus, in general, the amount of adsorbed plasmid DNA decreased with increasing environmental pH and the decreasing ratio of the amine functional groups on the surfaces owing to weaker positive potentials on the surface. For the high amine-containing surfaces, due to the strong electrostatic attraction, denser films were observed, and thus, the apparent thickness decreased slightly. The negatively charged carboxylic acid surfaces can still adsorb the negatively charged plasmid DNA at some conditions. In other words, the electrostatic model cannot explain the adsorption behavior completely, and the induced dipole (Debye) interaction between the charged and polarizable molecules needs to be considered as well.
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