Polyzwitterionic Coating of Porous Adsorbents for Therapeutic Apheresis.
Vladislav SemakTanja EichhornRené WeissViktoria WeberPublished in: Journal of functional biomaterials (2022)
Adsorbents for whole blood apheresis need to be highly blood compatible to minimize the activation of blood cells on the biomaterial surface. Here, we developed blood-compatible matrices by surface modification with polyzwitterionic polysulfobetainic and polycarboxybetainic coatings. Photoreactive zwitterionic terpolymers were synthesized by free-radical polymerization of zwitterionic, photoreactive, and fluorescent monomers. Upon UV irradiation, the terpolymers were photodeposited and mutually crosslinked on the surface of hydrophobic polystyrene- co -divinylbenzene and hydrophilic polyacrylamide- co -polyacrylate (DALI) beads. Fluorescent microscopy revealed coatings with an average thickness of 5 µm, which were limited to the bead surface. Blood compatibility was assessed based on polymer-induced hemolysis, coagulation parameters, and in vitro tests. The maintenance of the adsorption capacity after coating was studied in human whole blood with cytokines for polystyrene beads (remained capacity 25-67%) and with low-density lipoprotein (remained capacity 80%) for polyacrylate beads. Coating enhanced the blood compatibility of hydrophobic, but not of hydrophilic adsorbents. The most prominent effect was observed on coagulation parameters (e.g., PT, aPTT, TT, and protein C) and neutrophil count. Polycarboxybetaine with a charge spacer of five carbons was the most promising polyzwitterion for the coating of adsorbents for whole blood apheresis.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- induced apoptosis
- quantum dots
- low density lipoprotein
- optical coherence tomography
- living cells
- liquid chromatography
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- cell death
- small molecule
- radiation therapy
- high throughput
- hyaluronic acid
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- red blood cell
- fluorescent probe
- tissue engineering
- metal organic framework
- solid phase extraction