Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0432222 (SEM)
47,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Polyacrylic acid (pAA) was introduced onto Ar-plasma treatment silicone rubber (SR) membrane surfaces by plasma-induced grafted polymerization. Collagen (type III) was also linked with the carboxylic group of pAA grafted onto the SR surface via a carbodiimine agent to obtain a secondary structure of SR. The SR surface properties were characterized by ATR-FTIR, ESCA, contact angle, and SEM. The biocompatibility of the SR surface was evaluated by a culture of cornea epithelial (CE) cells. Subsequently, 75-450 micrograms cm-2 of pAA were obtained on the SR surfaces under different reactive conditions; 3-12 micrograms cm-2 of collagen were linked on modified surfaces of SR. Moreover, ATR-FTIR and ESCA were utilized to confirm the proceedings of these reactions. The hydrophility of the modified SR was measured by a contact angle meter. The values of contact angle for SR grafted with pAA were approximately 45-50 degrees; a 50-55 degrees contact angle on pAA-g-SR to be further linked with collagen was subsequently obtained. Moreover, the influence of surface properties toward migration, growth and attachment of CE cells on the modified surfaces was also examined. Here, untreated SR was used as a control. Experimental results indicated that the number of CE cells attached onto the controlled SR was negligible. The attachment of cells onto pAA-grafted surfaces was clearly observed and peusopoda occurred; however, cell growth was depressed. This depression may have been caused by the acid environment of the pAA-grafted membrane. Nevertheless, both cell attachment and growth onto collagen-linked surfaces were significant. In addition, the morphology of the cells attached onto this surface was considered normal for primary cells. Collagen introduced on the SR surface was not denatured, i.e the natural properties of collagen were maintained. The results obtained in this study will hopefully lead to the successful development of modified SR for clinical applications.
...
PMID:Plasma-induced grafted polymerization of acrylic acid and subsequent grafting of collagen onto polymer film as biomaterials. 884 64

Novel lactide-based poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) polymer networks (GL9-PEGs) were prepared by UV copolymerization of a glycerol-lactide triacrylate (GL9-Ac) with PEG monoacrylate (PEG-Ac) to use as scaffolds in tissue engineering, and the surface properties and biocompatibility of these networks were investigated as a function of PEG molecular weight and content. Analysis by ATR-FTIR and ESCA revealed that PEG was incorporated well within the GL9-PEG polymer networks and was enriched at the surfaces. From the results of SEM, AFM, and contact angle analyses, GL9-PEG networks showed relatively rough and irregular surfaces compared to GL9 network, but the mobile PEG chains coupled at their termini were readily exposed toward the aqueous environment when contacting water such that the surfaces became smoother and more hydrophilic. This reorientation and increase in hydrophilicity were more extensive with increasing PEG molecular weight and content. As compared to GL9 network lacking PEG, protein adsorption as well as platelet and S. epidermidis adhesion to GL9-PEG networks were significantly reduced as the molecular weight and content of PEG was increased, indicating that GL9-PEG networks are more biocompatible than the GL9 network due to PEG's passivity. Based on the physical and biological characterization reported, the GL9-PEG materials would appear to be interesting candidates as matrices for tissue engineering.
...
PMID:Surface characteristics and biocompatibility of lactide-based poly(ethylene glycol) scaffolds for tissue engineering. 968 34

Poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) (pMPC) was grafted onto the surface of a silicon rubber (SR) membrane (pMPC-SR) by plasma induced grafted copolymerization (PIP). Argon plasma was used to activate the SR surfaces. Determination was also made of the influences of grafted copolymerization reaction time, reaction temperature, and monomer concentration on polymerization yield. The surface properties of SR were characterized by ATR-FTIR, ESCA, and SEM. In those analyses the ATR-FTIR spectra indicated that the pMPC grafted onto the SR surface at 1720 and 3300 cm(-1). The elemental composition and different carbon bindings on the surface of the SR were examined by ESCA. An increasing P1s/C1s value g was obtained in the grafted polymerization yield with a concentration of 0.05-0.5M of MPC in the isolated ethanol solution. The surface morphologies of pMPC-SR differed more than those of control and Ar plasma treated surfaces. The difference could have been caused by the homogeneous graft polymerization of pMPC onto the SR membrane. In the biological analyses, protein adsorption on pMPC-SR surfaces was reduced. The reduced level increased with an increase in the pMPC grafted amount. The epithelial cell attachment and growth onto these samples were suppressed. The blood compatibility for a series of pMPC-SR surfaces was examined by platelet adhesion. Blood platelet morphologies in contact with the high ratio of pMPC-SR surfaces were maintained, meaning that in this case the release reaction for platelets never occurred. Consequently, the high amount of pMPC-SR surface had excellent blood compatibility, further suggesting that prevention of adhesion, activation of platelets, and adsorption of blood protein could be achieved.
...
PMID:Surface characterization and biological properties study of silicone rubber membrane grafted with phospholipid as biomaterial via plasma induced graft copolymerization. 974 16

Changes in skeletal troponin C (sTnC) structure during thin filament activation by Ca2+ and strongly bound cross-bridge states were monitored by measuring the linear dichroism of the 5' isomer of iodoacetamidotetramethylrhodamine (5'IATR), attached to Cys98 (sTnC-5'ATR), in sTnC-5'ATR reconstituted single skinned fibers from rabbit psoas muscle. To isolate the effects of Ca2+ and cross-bridge binding on sTnC structure, maximum Ca2+-activated force was inhibited with 0.5 mM AlF4- or with 30 mM 2,3 butanedione-monoxime (BDM) during measurements of the Ca2+ dependence of force and dichroism. Dichroism was 0.08 +/- 0.01 (+/- SEM, n = 9) in relaxing solution (pCa 9.2) and decreased to 0.004 +/- 0.002 (+/- SEM, n = 9) at pCa 4.0. Force and dichroism had similar Ca2+ sensitivities. Force inhibition with BDM caused no change in the amplitude and Ca2+ sensitivity of dichroism. Similarly, inhibition of force at pCa 4.0 with 0.5 mM AlF4- decreased force to 0.04 +/- 0.01 of maximum (+/- SEM, n = 3), and dichroism was 0.04 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 3) of the value at pCa 9.2 and unchanged relative to the corresponding normalized value at pCa 4.0 (0.11 +/- 0.05, +/- SEM; n = 3). Inhibition of force with AlF4- also had no effect when sTnC structure was monitored by labeling with either 5-dimethylamino-1-napthalenylsulfonylaziridine (DANZ) or 4-(N-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD). Increasing sarcomere length from 2.5 to 3.6 microm caused force (pCa 4.0) to decrease, but had no effect on dichroism. In contrast, rigor cross-bridge attachment caused dichroism at pCa 9.2 to decrease to 0.56 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 5) of the value at pCa 9. 2, and force was 0.51 +/- 0.04 (+/- SEM, n = 6) of pCa 4.0 control. At pCa 4.0 in rigor, dichroism decreased further to 0.19 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 6), slightly above the pCa 4.0 control level; force was 0.66 +/- 0.04 of pCa 4.0 control. These results indicate that cross-bridge binding in the rigor state alters sTnC structure, whereas cycling cross-bridges have little influence at either submaximum or maximum activating [Ca2+].
...
PMID:Ca2+ and cross-bridge-induced changes in troponin C in skinned skeletal muscle fibers: effects of force inhibition. 1004 29

Cardiovascular implant mineralization involving bioprosthetic materials, such as glutaraldehyde cross linked porcine aortic valves or synthetic materials such as polyurethanes, is an important problem that frequently leads to clinical failure of bioprosthetic heart valves, and complicates long-term experimental artificial heart device implants. Novel, proprietary, calcification resistant polyetherurethanes (PEU) as an alternative to bioprosthetic materials were the subject of these investigations. A series of PEU was derivatized through a proprietary reaction mechanism to achieve covalent binding of 100 to 500 nM/mg of bisphosphonate (2-hydroxyethane bisphosphonic acid, HEBP). The stability of HEBP (physically dispersed or covalently bound) verified by studying the release kinetics in physiological buffer (pH 7.4) at 37 degrees C, demonstrated the covalent binding reaction to be stable, efficient, and permanent. Surface (FTIR-ATR, ESCA, SEM/EDX) and bulk (solubility, GPC) properties demonstrated that the covalent binding of HEBP occurs in the soft segment of the PEU, reduces surface degradation, and does not affect the original material properties of the PEU (prior to derivatization). In vitro calcium diffusion of the derivatized PEU showed a decrease in calcium permeation as the concentration of HEBP covalent binding was increased. In vivo properties of underivatized and derivatized PEU (containing 100 nM of covalently bound HEBP) were studied with rat subdermal implants for 60 days. Explants demonstrated calcification resistance due to the covalently bound HEBP without any side effects. It is concluded that a PEU containing HEBP might serve as a calcification resistant candidate material for the fabrication of a heart valve prosthesis and other implantable devices.
...
PMID:Phosphonated polyurethanes that resist calcification. 1014 98

The in vitro structural stability of polyetherurethanes (PEUs) and polycarbonateurethanes (PCUs and PCUUs) was examined under strong oxidative conditions (0.5N HNO3, pH 0.3; and NaClO, 4% Cl2 available, pH approximately 13) and in the presence of a constant strain state. Solvent-cast dog-bone shaped specimens were strained at 100% uniaxial elongation over extension devices and completely immersed in the oxidative solutions at 50 degrees C for 15 days. Unstrained polyurethane (PU) samples were treated in the same way for comparison. The modification of the PU molecular structure was determined by DSC, GPC, ATR-FTIR, static contact angle, and surface roughness analyses. The incubation in nitric acid and sodium hypochlorite brought about a greater degradation of samples tested under the applied strain with the exception of PEU treated with nitric acid. PEU was the most affected material, showing bulk deterioration in NaClO and significant modifications in nitric acid, with the appearance of new IR bands, which were assigned to oxidation products. A higher phase separation between soft and hard domains occurred in PCUs upon incubation in nitric acid, the treatment with NaClO gave rise to new bands in the IR spectra, denoting the presence of oxidation products at the surface. The surface roughness greatly increased in strained PCUs with SEM evidence of deep cracks and holes or ragged and stretched fractures perpendicular to the direction of stress. PCUU underwent complex chemical modifications with a marked decrease of N-H and urea IR absorptions and showed a lower degradation than PEU and PCUs under mechanical constraint. From these results, sodium hypochlorite appears to be able to create an ESC-like degradation for PUs that are resistant to other aggressive chemical environments.
...
PMID:Synergistic effects of oxidative environments and mechanical stress on in vitro stability of polyetherurethanes and polycarbonateurethanes. 1039 59

Surface morphology changes of hydrazine-RF-plasma-exposed cellophane surfaces were monitored under 40 kHz and 13.56 MHz CW and pulsed discharge environments and the immobilization of alpha-chymotrypsin onto plasma-modified substrates was studied. It has been shown, using SEM and AFM techniques, that significantly different cellophane topographies are generated under different frequency and pulsing parameter conditions. ESCA and ATR-FTIR analyses of plasma-modified surfaces indicated the presence of primary amide and primary amine functionalities. It was found that the relative ratios of crystalline vs amorphous zones of the nascent surface layers can also be controlled by properly selected plasma parameters, including the duty cycles of pulsed plasma environments. Enzyme immobilization reactions with alpha-chymotrypsin were accomplished both from oxygen-plasma-generated carbonyl and hydrazine-plasma-created primary amine functionalities by anchoring the biomolecules either directly to the cellophane surface or by involving spacer molecules. It was found with the cellulose substrates that fairly good enzyme activity was retained without the necessity of intercalated spacer chains. It appears that the ability of the cellulose substrate to swell in the aqueous environment allows sufficient freedom of mobility for the immobilized enzyme to retain a significant part of its activity on the cellulose. However, the activities both of the free enzyme in the presence of cellophane, and that of the immobilized enzyme molecules are significantly diminished in comparison to the activity of the free enzyme, as a result of the incorporation of these molecules into the swollen network. Potential applications of immobilized enzymes from cold-plasma-functionalized surfaces are discussed.
...
PMID:Immobilized biomolecules on plasma functionalized cellophane. I. Covalently attached alpha-chymotrypsin. 1090 39

The blood-contacting properties and the effect on bacterial adhesion of a material based on polyurethane and poly(amido-amine) (PUPA), both in its native form and with the anticoagulant molecules heparin or sulphated hyaluronic acid (HyalS3.5) electrostatically bonded to its surface, were evaluated and compared in vitro. The presence of the biological molecules on the surface was revealed by a dye test and ATR/FTIR analysis. Bound heparin was found to maintain its physiological action, in terms of thrombin inactivation, as well as did free heparin. Moreover, it reduced the degree of platelet adhesion. On the contrary, bound HyalS3.5 lost its anticoagulant activity, though it reduced platelet adhesion. The number of platelets on both modified surfaces was low. Their shape distribution, as determined by SEM, did not differ significantly on the two modified surfaces or with respect to the bare PUPA surface. HyalS3.5 and heparin also inhibited adhesion of Staphylococcus epidermidis to the material. A possible relationship between the platelet and bacterial adhesion is ascribed to the mediating role of plasma proteins.
...
PMID:In vitro study of blood-contacting properties and effect on bacterial adhesion of a polymeric surface with immobilized heparin and sulphated hyaluronic acid. 1121 Oct 93

From the 1960s on, the conservation of monuments and stone masonry has witnessed an increasing use of polymeric products during restoration interventions. Actual penetration depths reached by different polymers within the porous stone matrix are supposed to be key factors in determining the efficacy of the treatments themselves (besides, of course, the chemical-mineralogical nature of the stone and the chemical-physical characteristics of the various polymers). This work presents some preliminary results obtained on specimens of Noto calcarenite treated with various polymeric protective products. Samples were investigated with direct analytical methods (micro-ATR spectroscopy, SEM) in order to assess penetration depths reached by polymers inside the stone while reducing to a minimum the necessary manipulation of specimens. The obtained results highlighted the following trend in penetration depths for the various products tested: siloxane product > partially fluorinated acrylic resin > acrylic resin. Moreover, data obtained allowed to establish direct correlation between long term efficacy of products and relative penetration depths.
...
PMID:A key factor in modern protection of historic buildings: the assessment of penetration of water-repellent polymers into porous stone-materials. 1183 60

Surface functional groups play important roles in nucleating calcium phosphate deposition on surgical titanium implants. In this study, various functional groups were introduced onto the surface of commercially pure titanium foils using a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) technique. An organic silane, 7-oct-1-enyltrichlorosilane (OETS) was used and -OH, -PO4H2, -COOH groups were derived from its unsaturated double bond. Ti foils were first oxidized in concentrated H2SO4/H2O2. ESCA and contact angle measurements were used to characterize the SAM surfaces and confirm the presence of various functional groups. A fast calcium phosphate deposition experiment was carried out by mixing Ca2+- and (PO4)(3-)-containing solutions in the presence of the surface-modified Ti samples at pH 7.4 at room temperature in order to verify the nucleating abilities of these functional groups. SEM, Raman spectroscopy, XRD and ATR-FTIR results showed that poorly crystallized hydroxyapatite (HA) can be deposited on the SAM surfaces with -PO4H2 and -COOH functional groups, but not onto the SAM with -CH=CH2 and -OH. -PO4H2 exhibited a stronger nucleating ability than that of -COOH. The oxidized Ti sample also showed some calcium phosphate deposition but to a lesser extent as compared to SAM surfaces with -PO4H2 and -COOH. The pre-deposited HA can rapidly induce biomimetic apatite layer formation after immersion in 1.5 SBF for 18 h regardless of the amount of pre-deposited HA. The results suggested that the pre-deposition of HA onto these functionalized SAM surfaces might be an effective and fast way to prepare biomimetic apatite coatings on surgical implants.
...
PMID:The role of surface functional groups in calcium phosphate nucleation on titanium foil: a self-assembled monolayer technique. 1210 81


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>