Abstract

Poly(2-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) (PHEMA) microbeads prepared by suspension polymerization were treated with diamine-plasmas (i.e. ethylene-diamine (EDA) and hexamethylene diamine (HMDA)) in a glow-discharge reactor in which the exposure time and glow-discharge power were changed between 5 and 30 min and 5 and 20 W, respectively. The amount of nitrogen deposition increased both with increase in exposure time and glow-discharge power. The maximum amounts of nitrogen deposition on the microbeads were 22.3 and 23.4 μmol g-1 with the EDA- and HMDAplasmas. Then, Cu(II) ions were incorporated onto the PHEMA microbeads by chelating with the nitrogen-carrying functional groups. Different amounts of Cu(II) ions (2.4-6.8 mg g-1) were incorporated on the PHEMA microbeads by changing the initial concentration of Cu(II) ions. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) adsorption onto the unmodified PHEMA, diamine-plasma treated PHEMA, and diamine-plasma treated Cu(II)-incorporated PHEMA microbeads was investigated. The nonspecific adsorption of BSA on the unmodified microbeads was very low (0.22 mg BSA g-1). Deposition of nitrogen increased the BSA adsorption (9.3 mg g-1 for EDA-plasma and 12.7 mg g-1 for HMDA-plasma). Cu(II)-incorporation significantly increased the BSA adsorption (154 mg g-1 for EDA-plasma and 178 mg g-1 for HMDA-plasma). Further increases in the albumin adsorption capacities of the polymer microbeads (185 mg g-1 for EDA-plasma and 208 mg g-1 for HMDA-plasma) were observed when human plasma was used. More than 92% of the adsorbed albumin molecules was desorbed in 1 h in the desorption medium containing 0.5 M NaSCN at pH 8.0. Repeated adsorption-desorption cycles showed the feasibility of these plasma-modified polymer microbeads.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call