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DOI: 10.1021/bm8014208
OpenAccess: Closed
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Resistance of Polysaccharide Coatings to Proteins, Hematopoietic Cells, and Marine Organisms

Xinyu Cao,Michala E. Pettit,Sheelagh L. Conlan,Wolfgang Wagner,Anthony D. Ho,Anthony S. Clare,James A. Callow,Maureen E. Callow,M. Grunze,Axel Rosenhahn

Alginic acid
Polysaccharide
Hyaluronic acid
2009
The interaction of covalently coupled hyaluronic acid, alginic acid, and pectic acid with proteins, cells (hematopoietic KG1a and Jurkat cells), and marine organisms (algal zoospores and barnacle cypris larvae) is compared. In contrast to cells and proteins for which such polysaccharide coatings are known for their antiadhesive properties, marine algal spores and barnacle cyprids were able to colonize the surfaces. Of the three polysaccharides, hyaluronic acid showed the lowest settlement of both Ulva zoopores and barnacles. Photoelectron spectroscopy reveals that the polysaccharide coatings tend to bind bivalent ions, such as calcium, from salt water. Such pretreatment with a high salinity medium significantly changes the protein and hematopoietic cell resistance of the surfaces. Complexation of bivalent ions is therefore considered as one reason for the decreased resistance of polysaccharide coatings when applied in the marine environment.
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    Resistance of Polysaccharide Coatings to Proteins, Hematopoietic Cells, and Marine Organisms” is a paper by Xinyu Cao Michala E. Pettit Sheelagh L. Conlan Wolfgang Wagner Anthony D. Ho Anthony S. Clare James A. Callow Maureen E. Callow M. Grunze Axel Rosenhahn published in 2009. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.