Protein-coated nanostructured surfaces affect the adhesion of Escherichia coli
Journal article, 2022

Developing new implant surfaces with anti-adhesion bacterial properties used for medical devices remains a challenge. Here we describe a novel study investigating nanotopography influences on bacterial adhesion on surfaces with controlled interspatial nanopillar distances. The surfaces were coated with proteins (fibrinogen, collagen, serum and saliva) prior to E. coli-WT adhesion under flow conditions. PiFM provided chemical mapping and showed that proteins adsorbed both between and onto the nanopillars with a preference for areas between the nanopillars. E. coli-WT adhered least to protein-coated areas with low surface nanopillar coverage, most to surfaces coated with saliva, while human serum led to the lowest adhesion. Protein-coated nanostructured surfaces affected the adhesion of E. coli-WT.

Author

Pawel Kallas

University of Oslo

Hakon Valen

Nordic Institute of Dental Materials

Mats Hulander

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Nikolaj Gadegaard

University of Glasgow

John Stormonth-Darling

University of Glasgow

Padraic O'Reilly

Molecular Vista

Bernd Thiede

University of Oslo

Martin Andersson

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Havard J. Haugen

University of Oslo

Nanoscale

2040-3364 (ISSN) 2040-3372 (eISSN)

Vol. 14 20 7736-7746

Subject Categories

Biomaterials Science

Medical Materials

DOI

10.1039/d2nr00976e

PubMed

35579413

More information

Latest update

5/30/2022