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Enhanced Adsorption Stability and Biofunction Durability with Phosphonate-Grafted, PEGylated Copolymer on Hydroxyapatite Surface.

Nonfouling surfaces are crucial in applications such as biosensors, medical implants, marine coatings, and drug delivery vehicles. However, their long-term coating stability and robust surface binding strength in physiological media remain challenging. Herein, a phosphonate-grafted, PEGylated copolymer on the hydroxyapatite (HA) surface is proposed to significantly improve the adsorption stability and thus enhance the biofunction durability accordingly. The phosphoryl (-PO3 ) grafted branch is employed in the functional polymer to facilitate attaching to the HA substrate. In addition, the polymer integrates the nonfouling polymer brushes of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) with the cell-adhesive moiety of cyclic Arg-Gly-Asp-d-Phe-Cys peptides (cRGD). A systematic study on the as-synthesized PEGylated graft copolymer indicates a synergistic binding mechanism of the NH2 and PO3 groups to HA, achieving a high surface coverage with desirable adsorption stability. The cRGD/PEGylated copolymers of optimized grafting architecture are proven to effectively adsorb to HA surfaces as a self-assembled copolymer monolayer, showing stability with minimal desorption even in a complex, physiological medium and effectively preventing nonspecific protein adsorption as examined with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D). Direct adhesion assays further confirm that the enhanced coating stability and biofunction durability of the phosphonate-grafted, cRGD-PEGylated copolymer can considerably promote osteoblast attachment on HA surfaces, meanwhile preventing microbial adhesion. This research has resulted in a solution of self-assembly polymer structure optimization that exhibits stable nonfouling characteristics.

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