55 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Bioadhesion in the oral cavity and approaches for biofilm management by surface modifications
Background: All soft and solid surface structures in the oral cavity are covered by the acquired pellicle followed by bacterial colonization. This applies for natural structures as well as for restorative or prosthetic materials; the adherent bacterial biofilm is associated among others with the development of caries, periodontal diseases, peri-implantitis, or denture-associated stomatitis. Accordingly, there is a considerable demand for novel materials and coatings that limit and modulate bacterial attachment and/or propagation of microorganisms. Objectives and findings: The present paper depicts the current knowledge on the impact of different physicochemical surface characteristics on bioadsorption in the oral cavity. Furthermore, it was carved out which strategies were developed in dental research and general surface science to inhibit bacterial colonization and to delay biofilm formation by low-fouling or “easy-to-clean” surfaces. These include the modulation of physicochemical properties such as periodic topographies, roughness, surface free energy, or hardness. In recent years, a large emphasis was laid on micro- and nanostructured surfaces and on liquid repellent superhydrophic as well as superhydrophilic interfaces. Materials incorporating mobile or bound nanoparticles promoting bacteriostatic or bacteriotoxic properties were also used. Recently, chemically textured interfaces gained increasing interest and could represent promising solutions for innovative antibioadhesion interfaces. Due to the unique conditions in the oral cavity, mainly in vivo or in situ studies were considered in the review. Conclusion: Despite many promising approaches for modulation of biofilm formation in the oral cavity, the ubiquitous phenomenon of bioadsorption and adhesion pellicle formation in the challenging oral milieu masks surface properties and therewith hampers low-fouling strategies. Clinical relevance: Improved dental materials and surface coatings with easy-to-clean properties have the potential to improve oral health, but extensive and systematic research is required in this field to develop biocompatible and effective substances. © 2020, The Author(s)
Recommended from our members
Fabrication of multifunctional titanium surfaces by producing hierarchical surface patterns using laser based ablation methods
Textured implant surfaces with micrometer and sub-micrometer features can improve contact properties like cell adhesion and bacteria repellency. A critical point of these surfaces is their mechanical stability during implantation. Therefore, strategies capable to provide both biocompatibility for an improved implant healing and resistance to wear for protecting the functional surface are required. In this work, laser-based fabrication methods have been used to produce hierarchical patterns on titanium surfaces. Using Direct Laser Writing with a nanosecond pulsed laser, crater-like structures with a separation distance of 50 µm are produced on unpolished titanium surfaces. Directly on this texture, a hole-like pattern with 5 µm spatial period is generated using Direct Laser Interference Patterning with picosecond pulses. While the smaller features should reduce the bacterial adhesion, the larger geometry was designed to protect the smaller features from wear. On the multifunctional surface, the adherence of E. Coli bacteria is reduced by 30% compared to the untreated reference. In addition, wear test performed on the multiple-scale patterns demonstrated the possibility to protect the smaller features by the larger craters. Also, the influence of the laser treatment on the growth of a titanium oxide layer was evaluated using Energy Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy analysis. © 2019, The Author(s)
Gravitational lensing statistics with extragalactic surveys. I. A lower limit on the cosmological constant
peer reviewedWe reanalyse optical gravitational lens surveys from the literature in order to determine relative probabilities in the lambda_ {0}-Omega_ {0} plane, using a softened singular isothermal sphere lens model. In addition, we examine a portion of the lambda_ {0}-Omega_ {0} plane which includes all viable cosmological models; this is vital for comparison with other cosmological tests. The results are, within the errors, consistent with those of more specialised analyses, such as those concerning upper limits on lambda_ {0} in a flat universe. We note that gravitational lensing statistics can provide a quite robust lower limit on the cosmological constant as well, which could prove important in confirming current claims of a positive cosmological constant. At 95% confidence, our lower and upper limits on lambda_ {0}-Omega_ {0}, using lens statistics information alone, are respectively -3.17 and 0.3. For a flat universe, these correspond to lower and upper limits on lambda_ {0} of respectively -1.09 and 0.65.TMR Program, Research Contract ERBFMRXCT960034 'CERES
In Situ Experiments To Reveal the Role of Surface Feature Sidewalls in the Cassie–Wenzel Transition
Waterproof and self-cleaning surfaces continue to attract much attention as they can be instrumental in various different technologies. Such surfaces are typically rough, allowing liquids to contact only the outermost tops of their asperities, with air being entrapped underneath. The formed solid–liquid–air interface is metastable and, hence, can be forced into a completely wetted solid surface. A detailed understanding of the wetting barrier and the dynamics of this transition is critically important for the practical use of the related surfaces. Toward this aim, wetting transitions were studied in situ at a set of patterned perfluoropolyether dimethacrylate (PFPEdma) polymer surfaces exhibiting surface features with different types of sidewall profiles. PFPEdma is intrinsically hydrophobic and exhibits a refractive index very similar to water. Upon immersion of the patterned surfaces into water, incident light was differently scattered at the solid–liquid–air and solid–liquid interface, which allows for distinguishing between both wetting states by dark-field microscopy. The wetting transition observed with this methodology was found to be determined by the sidewall profiles of the patterned structures. Partial recovery of the wetting was demonstrated to be induced by abrupt and continuous pressure reductions. A theoretical model based on Laplace’s law was developed and applied, allowing for the analytical calculation of the transition barrier and the potential to revert the wetting upon pressure reduction
Bioadhesion on Textured Interfaces in the Human Oral Cavity—An In Situ Study
Extensive biofilm formation on materials used in restorative dentistry is a common reason
for their failure and the development of oral diseases like peri-implantitis or secondary caries.
Therefore, novel materials and strategies that result in reduced biofouling capacities are urgently
sought. Previous research suggests that surface structures in the range of bacterial cell sizes seem to
be a promising approach to modulate bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation. Here we investigated
bioadhesion within the oral cavity on a low surface energy material (perfluorpolyether) with different
texture types (line-, hole-, pillar-like), feature sizes in a range from 0.7–4.5 µm and graded distances
(0.7–130.5 µm). As a model system, the materials were fixed on splints and exposed to the oral
cavity. We analyzed the enzymatic activity of amylase and lysozyme, pellicle formation, and bacterial
colonization after 8 h intraoral exposure. In opposite to in vitro experiments, these in situ experiments
revealed no clear signs of altered bacterial surface colonization regarding structure dimensions and
texture types compared to unstructured substrates or natural enamel. In part, there seemed to be a
decreasing trend of adherent cells with increasing periodicities and structure sizes, but this pattern
was weak and irregular. Pellicle formation took place on all substrates in an unaltered manner.
However, pellicle formation was most pronounced within recessed areas thereby partially masking
the three-dimensional character of the surfaces. As the natural pellicle layer is obviously the most
dominant prerequisite for bacterial adhesion, colonization in the oral environment cannot be easily
controlled by structural means
Recommended from our members
Controlling Surface Wettability for Automated In Situ Array Synthesis and Direct Bioscreening
The in situ synthesis of biomolecules on glass surfaces for direct bioscreening can be a powerful tool in the fields of pharmaceutical sciences, biomaterials, and chemical biology. However, it is still challenging to 1) achieve this conventional multistep combinatorial synthesis on glass surfaces with small feature sizes and high yields and 2) develop a surface which is compatible with solid-phase syntheses, as well as the subsequent bioscreening. This work reports an amphiphilic coating of a glass surface on which small droplets of polar aprotic organic solvents can be deposited with an enhanced contact angle and inhibited motion to permit fully automated multiple rounds of the combinatorial synthesis of small-molecule compounds and peptides. This amphiphilic coating can be switched into a hydrophilic network for protein- and cell-based screening. Employing this in situ synthesis method, chemical space can be probed via array technology with unprecedented speed for various applications, such as lead discovery/optimization in medicinal chemistry and biomaterial development
Evaluation of Surface Microtopography Engineered by Direct Laser Interference for Bacterial Anti-Biofouling
© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. Modification of the biomaterial surface topography is a promising strategy to prevent bacterial adhesion and biofilm formation. In this study, we use direct laser interference patterning (DLIP) to modify polystyrene surface topography at sub-micrometer scale. The results revealed that three-dimensional micrometer structures have a profound impact on bacterial adhesion. Thus, line- and pillar-like patterns enhanced S. aureus adhesion, whereas complex lamella microtopography reduced S. aureus adhesion in static and continuous flow culture conditions. Interestingly, lamella-like textured surfaces retained the capacity to inhibit S. aureus adhesion both when the surface is coated with human serum proteins and when the material is implanted subcutaneously in a foreign-body associated infection model.J. Valle was supported by Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation “Ramón y Cajal” contract. This research was supported by grants AGL2011-23954 and BIO2011-30503-C02-02 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity and IIQ14066. RI1 from Innovation Department of the Government of Navarra. A. Lasagni, D. Langhenirich, and R. Helbig thank the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) for the financial support of the project “Mechanically stable anti-adhesive polymer surfaces” (LA-2513 4-1).Peer Reviewe
Recommended from our members
Understanding Beta-Lactam-Induced Lysis at the Single-Cell Level
Mechanical rupture, or lysis, of the cytoplasmic membrane is a common cell death pathway in bacteria occurring in response to β-lactam antibiotics. A better understanding of the cellular design principles governing the susceptibility and response of individual cells to lysis could indicate methods of potentiating β-lactam antibiotics and clarify relevant aspects of cellular physiology. Here, we take a single-cell approach to bacterial cell lysis to examine three cellular features-turgor pressure, mechanosensitive channels, and cell shape changes-that are expected to modulate lysis. We develop a mechanical model of bacterial cell lysis and experimentally analyze the dynamics of lysis in hundreds of single Escherichia coli cells. We find that turgor pressure is the only factor, of these three cellular features, which robustly modulates lysis. We show that mechanosensitive channels do not modulate lysis due to insufficiently fast solute outflow, and that cell shape changes result in more severe cellular lesions but do not influence the dynamics of lysis. These results inform a single-cell view of bacterial cell lysis and underscore approaches of combatting antibiotic tolerance to β-lactams aimed at targeting cellular turgor
- …