Abstract

Nonlinear multiphoton photo-cross-linking and photopolymerization of proteins and polymers in solution have been used to direct the three-dimensional assembly of micron scale objects. Two aspects of fabricated proteinatious matrixes are examined in this paper: the efficiency of protein photopolymerization and the application of fabricated matrixes as sustained release devices. The efficiency of photoactivated cross-linking of the proteins bovine serum albumin and fibrinogen, using rose bengal, have been determined and found to vary with photosensitizer concentration. This concentration dependence suggests that the mechanism for protein cross-linking is a direct hydrogen transfer between an amino acid residue of the protein and the dye molecule itself. A comparison of the surface structure of single and multiple protein oligomers is undertaken and shown to vary significantly depending on fabrication materials. Alkaline phosphatase bioactivity, upon entrapment in a protein structure, is maintained. The properties of fabricated protein matrixes as sustained release devices is also examined. The rates of diffusion of fluorescently labeled dextrans (10 and 40 kDa) from an optically fabricated BSA matrix vary with molecular weight and are linear with cross-link density. The half-life of release of 10 kDa dextran-TMR from a BSA micron scale structure is less than or equal to 6 min while 40 kDa dextran-TMR half-life of release is 25 min. Finally, rhodamine 610, a typical drug size molecule, was entrapped in an acrylamide structure, and its release is found to be diffusion-limited with half-lives of 10−31 min, depending on cross-link density.

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