Start Publications The Vroman effect: Competitive protein exchange with dynamic ...
QSense

The Vroman effect: Competitive protein exchange with dynamic multilayer protein aggregates

Year: 2013

Journal: Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces Volume 103, 1 March 2013, Pages 395–404, 20130117

Authors: Stacey L. Hirsh a, David R. McKenzie a, Neil J. Nosworthy a, John A. Denman b, Osman U. Sezerman c, Marcela M.M. Bilek a

Last authors: Marcela M.M. Bilek

Organizations: a Applied and Plasma Physics, School of Physics, The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia b Ian Wark Institute, University of South Australia, Mawson Lakes, SA 5046, Australia c Sabanci University, Biological Sciences and Bioengineering, Istanbul, Turkey

Country: Australia, Turkey

The surface immobilization of proteins is an emerging field with applications in a wide range of important areas: biomedical devices, disease diagnosis, biosensing, food processing, biofouling, and bioreactors. Proteins, in Nature, often work synergistically, as in the important enzyme mixture, cellulase. It is necessary to preserve these synergies when utilizing surface immobilized proteins. However, the competitive displacement of earlier adsorbed proteins by other proteins with stronger binding affinities (the “Vroman effect”) results in undesired layer instabilities that are difficult to control. Although this nanoscale phenomenon has been extensively studied over the last 40 years, the process through which this competitive exchange occurs is not well understood. This paper uses atomic force microscopy, QCM-D, TOF-SIMS, and in-solution TOF-MS to show that this competitive exchange process can occur through the turning of multilayer protein aggregates. This dynamic process is consistent with earlier postulated “transient complex” models, in which the exchange occurs in three stages: an initial layer adsorbs, another protein layer then embeds itself into the initial layer, forming a “transient complex;” the complex “turns,” exposing the first layer to solution; proteins from the first layer desorb resulting in a final adsorbed protein composition that is enriched in proteins from the second layer.