Stability of (Bio)Functionalized Porous Aluminum Oxide
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Abstract
Porous aluminum oxide (PAO), a nanostructured
support for, among
others, culturing microorganisms, was chemically modified in order
to attach biomolecules that can selectively interact with target bacteria.
We present the first comprehensive study of monolayer-modified PAO
using conditions that are relevant to microbial growth with a range
of functional groups (carboxylic acid, α-hydroxycarboxylic acid,
alkyne, alkene, phosphonic acid, and silane). Their stability was
initially assessed in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.0) at room temperature.
The most stable combination (PAO with phosphonic acids) was further
studied over a range of physiological pHs (4–8) and temperatures
(up to 80 °C). Varying the pH had no significant effect on the
stability, but it gradually decreased with increasing temperature.
The stability of phosphonic acid-modified PAO surfaces was shown to
depend strongly on the other terminal group of the monolayer structure:
in general, hydrophilic monolayers were less stable than hydrophobic
monolayers. Finally, an alkyne-terminated PAO surface was reacted
with an azide-linked mannose derivative. The resulting mannose-presenting
PAO surface showed the clearly increased adherence of a mannose-binding
bacterium, <i>Lactobacillus plantarum</i>, and also allowed
for bacterial outgrowth