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Generic Bioaffinity Silicone Surfaces
Journal article

Generic Bioaffinity Silicone Surfaces

Abstract

Synthetic polymer surfaces require surface modification to improve biocompatibility. A generic route to biocompatible silicone elastomers is described involving high yield surface functionalization of standard silicones with hydrosilanes, hydrosilylation using asymmetric, allyl-, NSC-terminated PEO of narrow molecular weight, and covalent modification in one step with amine-containing biological molecules including oligopeptides (YIGSR, RGDS), proteins (EGF, albumin, fibrinogen, mucin), and glycosaminoglycans (heparin). Efficient, high-density binding (e.g., 0.2 EGF molecules/nm2) was demonstrated using radiolabeling studies. The resulting surfaces were demonstrated to be biocompatible by further reaction with biomolecules, for example, thrombosis suppression on surfaces modified by heparin + ATIII, and the formation of confluent corneal epithelial cell layers on EGF, RGDS, or YIGSR surfaces.

Authors

Chen H; Brook MA; Sheardown HD; Chen Y; Klenkler B

Journal

Bioconjugate Chemistry, Vol. 17, No. 1, pp. 21–28

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

January 1, 2006

DOI

10.1021/bc050174b

ISSN

1043-1802

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