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1.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng ; 53(10): 2075-83, 2006 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17019872

RESUMEN

Presently, there is interest in making medical devices such as expandable stents and intravascular microactuators from shape memory polymer (SMP). One of the key challenges in realizing SMP medical devices is the implementation of a safe and effective method of thermally actuating various device geometries in vivo. A novel scheme of actuation by Curie-thermoregulated inductive heating is presented. Prototype medical devices made from SMP loaded with nickel zinc ferrite ferromagnetic particles were actuated in air by applying an alternating magnetic field to induce heating. Dynamic mechanical thermal analysis was performed on both the particle-loaded and neat SMP materials to assess the impact of the ferrite particles on the mechanical properties of the samples. Calorimetry was used to quantify the rate of heat generation as a function of particle size and volumetric loading of ferrite particles in the SMP. These tests demonstrated the feasibility of SMP actuation by inductive heating. Rapid and uniform heating was achieved in complex device geometries and particle loading up to 10% volume content did not interfere with the shape recovery of the SMP.


Asunto(s)
Materiales Biocompatibles/química , Materiales Biocompatibles/efectos de la radiación , Equipos y Suministros , Calor , Magnetismo/instrumentación , Polímeros/química , Polímeros/efectos de la radiación , Diseño de Equipo , Análisis de Falla de Equipo , Ensayo de Materiales
2.
Langmuir ; 22(4): 1749-57, 2006 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16460101

RESUMEN

We present evidence of multivalent interactions between a single protein molecule and multiple carbohydrates at a pH where the protein can bind four ligands. The evidence is based not only on measurements of the force required to rupture the bonds formed between concanavalin A (ConA) and alpha-D-mannose but also on an analysis of the polymer-extension force curves to infer the polymer architecture that binds the protein to the cantilever and the ligands to the substrate. We find that although the rupture forces for multiple carbohydrate connections to a single protein are larger than the rupture force for a single connection, they do not scale additively with increasing number. Specifically, the most common rupture forces are approximately 46, 68, and 85 pN at a loading rate of 650 +/- 25 pN/s, which we argue corresponds to 1, 2, and 3 ligands being pulled simultaneously from a single protein as corroborated by an analysis of the linkage architecture. As in our previous work polymer tethers allow us to discriminate between specific and nonspecific binding. We analyze the binding configuration (i.e., serial vs parallel connections) through fitting the polymer stretching data with modified wormlike chain (WLC) models that predict how the effective stiffness of the tethers is affected by multiple connections. This analysis establishes that the forces we measure are due to single proteins interacting with multiple ligands, the first force spectroscopy study that establishes single-molecule multivalent binding unambiguously.


Asunto(s)
Concanavalina A/química , Manosa/química , Modelos Químicos , Ligandos , Unión Proteica , Análisis Espectral
3.
Langmuir ; 21(26): 12064-7, 2005 Dec 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16342971

RESUMEN

We show with atomic force microscopy that thioctic acid, a spatially constrained system with two sulfur linkages to gold, is less stable to tensile stress than a thiolate with a single attachment to gold. The force required to remove the dithiolate-linked thioctic acid was 0.31+/-0.13 nN, whereas the force required to remove a simple thiolate from the gold substrate was 1.05+/-0.29 nN. These results suggest that SAMs of densely packed or polypodal thiols may be substantially less stable under tensile stress than previously recognized and that the additional thiolate linkages may not only fail to increase the overall strength of attachment but could actually reduce it.

4.
Biophys J ; 86(4): 2430-7, 2004 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15041680

RESUMEN

We present the measurement of the force required to rupture a single protein-sugar bond using a methodology that provides selective discrimination between specific and nonspecific binding events and helps verify the presence of a single functional molecule on the atomic force microscopy tip. In particular, the interaction force between a polymer-tethered concanavalin-A protein (ConA) and a similarly tethered mannose carbohydrate was measured as 47 +/- 9 pN at a bond loading rate of approximately 10 nN/s. Computer simulations of the polymer molecular configurations were used to determine the angles that the polymers could sweep out during binding and, in conjunction with mass spectrometry, used to separate the angular effects from the effects due to a distribution of tether lengths. We find that when using commercially available polymer tethers that vary in length from 19 to 29 nm, the angular effects are relatively small and the rupture distributions are dominated by the 10-nm width of the tether length distribution. In all, we show that tethering both a protein and its ligand allows for the determination of the single-molecule bond rupture force with high sensitivity and includes some validation for the presence of a single-tethered functional molecule on the atomic force microscopy tip.


Asunto(s)
Simulación por Computador , Concanavalina A/química , Manosa/química , Modelos Moleculares , Nanotecnología , Espectrometría de Masas , Microscopía de Fuerza Atómica , Unión Proteica
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