自愈水凝胶
粘附
材料科学
生物物理学
构象熵
刚度
弹性模量
纳米技术
化学物理
复合材料
化学
高分子化学
分子
生物
有机化学
作者
Hanqing Wang,Fawad Jacobi,Johannes Waschke,Laura Hartmann,Hartmut Löwen,Stephan Schmidt
标识
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201702040
摘要
Abstract Mechanosensitivity in biology, e.g., cells responding to material stiffness, is important for the design of synthetic biomaterials. It is caused by protein receptors able to undergo conformational changes depending on mechanical stress during adhesion processes. Here the elastic modulus dependence of adhesive interactions is systematically quantified using ligand–receptor model systems that are generally not thought to be mechanosensitive: biotin–avidin, mannose–concanavalin A, and electrostatic interactions between carboxylic acids and polycationic surfaces. Interactions are measured by microgel sensors of different stiffness adhering to surfaces presenting a corresponding binding partner. Adhesion is generally decreased for softer microgels due to reduced density of binding partners. Density‐normalized data show that low‐affinity carbohydrate ligands exhibit reduced binding in softer networks, probably due to increased network conformational entropy. However, in case of stronger interactions with large interaction range (electrostatic) and large lifetime (biotin–avidin) density normalized adhesion is increased. This suggests compensation of entropic repulsion for softer networks probably due to their increased mechanical deformation upon microgel adhesion and enhanced cooperative binding. In essence, experiments indicate that soft interacting polymer materials exhibit entropic repulsion, which can be overcome by strongly interacting species in the network harnessing network flexibility in order to increase adhesion.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI