Abstract

This paper describes the use of surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy and self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of alkanethiols on gold to evaluate the ability of surfaces terminating in different combinations of charged groups to resist the nonspecific adsorption of proteins from aqueous buffer. Mixed SAMs formed from a 1:1 combination of a thiol terminated in a trimethylammonium group and a thiol terminated in a sulfonate group adsorbed less than 1% of a monolayer of two proteins with different characteristics: fibrinogen and lysozyme. Single-component SAMs formed from thiols terminating in groups combining a positively charged moiety and a negatively charged moiety were also capable of resisting the adsorption of proteins. Single-component SAMs presenting single charges adsorbed nearly a full monolayer of protein. The amount of protein that adsorbed to mixed zwitterionic SAMs did not depend on the ionic strength or the pH of the buffer in which the protein was dissolved. The amount of protein that adsorbed to single-component zwitterionic SAMs increased as the ionic strength of the buffer decreased; it also decreased as the pH of the buffer increased (at constant ionic strength). Single-component zwitterionic SAMs composed of thiols terminating in N,N-dimethyl-amino-propane-1-sulfonic acid (-N+(CH3)2CH2CH2CH2SO3-) groups were substantially more effective at resisting adsorption of fibrinogen and lysozyme from buffer at physiological ionic strength and pH than single-component zwitterionic SAMs composed of thiols terminating in phosphoric acid 2-trimethylamino-ethyl ester (-OP(O)2-OCH2CH2N+(CH3)3). Several of these zwitterionic SAMs were comparable to the best known systems for resisting nonspecific adsorption of protein.

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