Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering, Vol.129, No.3, 348-353, 2020
Immobilization of surface non-affinitive protein onto a metal surface by an external electric field
We investigated an alternate technique to coat the surface with a protein having no surface affinity, without the use of any exotic chemical agents. An external electric field was utilized to prepare the protein coating on a metal substrate. Stainless steel (St) substrate and lysozyme (LSZ) were used as the surface to be coated and the model non-adsorptive protein, respectively. Dynamics of the adsorption of LSZ on the St surface in the presence and absence of an external electric potential (EEP) were monitored by in-situ ellipsometry. Applying negative surface potential (-0.4 V vs Ag/AgCl) forced the adsorption of LSZ onto the St surface where LSZ did not adsorb without applying any EEP. The repetition of the EEP-application and -cut-off indicated the controllability of the LSZ coating amount depending on the total duration of the EEP-application. The coated LSZ largely remained bound to the surface even by the cut-off of the external electric field, the ratio of which to the detached amount was roughly constant (approximately 7:3). Furthermore, the LSZ coated surface on the St substrate was found to be reversibly switched between being affinitive and non-affinitive to a typical model protein adsorbate (bovine serum albumin) by the EEP-application and cut-off. (C) 2019, The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Adsorption;Lysozyme;Metal oxide;External electric potential;Ellipsometer;Surface hydroxyl group;Electrostatic interaction