Functionalized Poly(ethylene glycol)-Based Bioassay Surface Chemistry That Facilitates Bio-Immobilization and Inhibits Nonspecific Protein, Bacterial, and Mammalian Cell Adhesion

Abstract
This paper describes a new bioassay surface chemistry that effectively inhibits nonspecific biomolecular and cell binding interactions, while providing a capacity for specific immobilization of desired biomolecules. Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) as the primary component in nonfouling film chemistry is well-established, but the multicomponent formulation described here is unique in that it (1) is applied in a single, reproducible, solution-based coating step; (2) can be applied to diverse substrate materials without the use of special primers; and (3) is readily functionalized to provide specific attachment chemistries. Surface analysis data are presented, detailing surface roughness, polymer film thickness, and film chemistry. Protein nonspecific binding assays demonstrate significant inhibition of serum, fibrinogen, and lysozyme adsorption to coated glass, indium tin oxide, and tissue culture polystyrene dishes. Inhibition of Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella pneumoniae microbial adhesion in a microfluidic flow cell and inhibition of fibroblast cell adhesion from serum-based cell culture are shown. Effective functionalization of the coating is demonstrated by directing fibroblast adhesion to polymer surfaces activated with an RGD peptide. Batch-to-batch reproducibility data are included. The in situ cross-linked PEG-based coating chemistry is unique in its formulation, and its surface properties are attractive for a broad range of in vitro bioassay applications.