1 research outputs found
Toward Infection-Resistant Surfaces: Achieving High Antimicrobial Peptide Potency by Modulating the Functionality of Polymer Brush and Peptide
Bacterial
infection associated with indwelling medical devices
and implants is a major clinical issue, and the prevention or treatment
of such infections is challenging. Antimicrobial coatings offer a
significant step toward addressing this important clinical problem.
Antimicrobial coatings based on tethered antimicrobial peptides (AMPs)
on hydrophilic polymer brushes have been shown to be one of the most
promising strategies to avoid bacterial colonization and have demonstrated
broad spectrum activity. Optimal combinations of the functionality
of the polymer-brush-tethered AMPs are essential to maintaining long-term
AMP activity on the surface. However, there is limited knowledge currently
available on this topic. Here we report the development of potent
antimicrobial coatings on implant surfaces by elucidating the roles
of polymer brush chemistry and peptide structure on the overall antimicrobial
activity of the coatings. We screened several combinations of polymer
brush coatings and AMPs constructed on nanoparticles, titanium surfaces,
and quartz slides on their antimicrobial activity and bacterial adhesion
against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Highly efficient
killing of planktonic bacteria by the antimicrobial coatings on nanoparticle
surfaces, as well as potent killing of adhered bacteria in the case
of coatings on titanium surfaces, was observed. Remarkably, the antimicrobial
activity of AMP-conjugated brush coatings demonstrated a clear dependence
on the polymer brush chemistry and peptide structure, and optimization
of these parameters is critical to achieving infection-resistant surfaces.
By analyzing the interaction of polymer-brush-tethered AMPs with model
lipid membranes using circular dichroism spectroscopy, we determined
that the polymer brush chemistry has an influence on the extent of
secondary structure change of tethered peptides before and after interaction
with biomembranes. The peptide structure also has an influence on
the density of conjugated peptides on polymer brush coatings and the
resultant wettability of the coatings, and both of these factors contributed
to the antimicrobial activity and bacterial adhesion of the coatings.
Overall, this work highlights the importance of optimizing the functionality
of the polymer brush to achieve infection-resistant surfaces and presents
important insight into the design criteria for the selection of polymers
and AMPs toward the development of potent antimicrobial coating on
implants