25 research outputs found
Differential attraction and repulsion of Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa on molecularly smooth titanium films
Magnetron sputtering techniques were used to prepare molecularly smooth titanium thin films
possessing an average roughness between 0.18 nm and 0.52 nm over 5 μm × 5 μm AFM scanning
areas. Films with an average roughness of 0.52 nm or lower were found to restrict the extent
of P. aeruginosa cell attachment, with less than 0.5% of all available cells being
retained on the surface. The attachment of S. aureus cells was also limited on films
with an average surface roughness of 0.52 nm, however they exhibited a remarkable propensity
for attachment on the nano-smoother 0.18 nm average surface roughness films, with the
attachment density being almost twice as great as that observed on the nano-rougher film.
The difference in attachment behaviour can be attributed to the difference in morphology of
the rod-shaped P. aeruginosa compared to the spherical S. aureus cells