Biadhesive Peptides for Assembling Stainless Steel and Compound Loaded Micro-Containers

Abstract

Biadhesive peptides (peptesives) are an attractive tool for assembling two chemically different materials—for example, stainless steel and polycaprolactone (PCL). Stainless steel is used in medical stents and PCL is used as a biodegradable polymer for fabrication of tissue growth scaffolds and drug delivering micro-containers. Biadhesive peptides are composed of two domains (e.g., dermaseptin S1 and LCI) with different material-binding properties that are separated through a stiff peptide-spacer. The peptesive dermaseptin S1-domain Z-LCI immobilizes antibiotic-loaded PCL micro-containers on stainless steel surfaces. Immobilization is visualized by microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy analysis and released antibiotic from the micro-containers is confirmed through growth inhibition of Escherichia coli cells.

Description
Keywords
antibiotic delivery, bare-metal stents, biadhesive peptide, drug-eluting system, polycaprolactone
Citation
Apitius, L., Buschmann, S., Bergs, C., Schönauer, D., Jakob, F., Pich, A., & Schwaneberg, U. (2019). Biadhesive Peptides for Assembling Stainless Steel and Compound Loaded Micro-Containers. 19(9). https://doi.org//10.1002/mabi.201900125
License
CC BY-NC 4.0 Unported