Title: Protein Interactions with Biomaterials
1Protein Interactions with Biomaterials
- Topics
- Thermodynamics of Protein Adsorption
- Protein Structure
- Protein Transport and Adsorption Kinetics
2Thermodynamics
- For a reaction to spontaneously occur, the change
in Gibbs free energy, DG, must be lt0
G Gibbs free energy H enthalpy (energy
available to do work) S entropy (disorder)
3Thermodynamics of Protein Adsorption
Hydrophobicity Hydrophobic areas attract
hydrophobic areas Charge Opposite charges
attract Size Larger molecules have more active
sites Structure the stability (strength of
intramolecular bonds) and molecule unfolding rate
4- Surface features and their interactions with
proteins - Topography greater texture means greater
interaction - Composition Chemistry governs types of
interactions - Hydrophobicity hydrophobic surfaces bind more
protein - Heterogeneity non-uniform surfaces have many
different types of domains to interact with
proteins - Potential surface charge affects charge
distributions of ions in solution and proteins
5Protein Structure
Proteins are polymeric chains of amino acids.
Each of the 20 standard amino acids have a
one-letter symbol. A sequence of three symbols,
as shown for RNA (right) is called a codon
Amino acids have a central carbon atom attached
to a hydrogen, a carboxyl group (COOH) and an
amine group (NH2)
6The pK value is related to the pH of the amino
acid. Higher values are more acidic (lower pH)
7(No Transcript)
8Proteins (polypeptides) are formed from
condensation reactions between amino acids
(peptide bonds).
9Secondary Structures
a-helix
b pleated structure
10Tertiary and Quaternary Structures
- Interactions between side chains control how the
protein folds in three and four dimensions.
These interactions include - Covalent bonding
- Ionic interactions
- Hydrogen bonding
- Hydrophobic interactions
11Protein Transport and Adsorption Kinetics
- Four main types of protein transport
- Diffusion
- Thermal convection
- Flow (convective transport)
- Coupled transport (combinations of 1-3)
A concentration gradient drives diffusion, while
a temperature gradient creates thermal convection
12Diffusion is Ficks 2nd law, with the addition of
a contribution from flow
The velocity profile is given by
Here in cylindrical coordinates
C concentration D diffusivity
V velocity m viscosity Q volumetric flow
rate
13Initial absorption rate is high on a clean
surface Rate slows as surface becomes
covered Further absorption occurs as molecules
rearrange to create new free surface
14Protein exchange on a material surface. The
initial protein (light gray) is wedged out of the
way by the newer proteins (dark gray), which have
a greater affinity for the material