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Bacterial Adhesion Is Affected by the Thickness and Stiffness of Poly(ethylene glycol) Hydrogels.


ABSTRACT: Despite lacking visual, auditory, and olfactory perception, bacteria sense and attach to surfaces. Many factors, including the chemistry, topography, and mechanical properties of a surface, are known to alter bacterial attachment, and in this study, using a library of nine protein-resistant poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels immobilized on glass slides, we demonstrate that the thickness or amount of polymer concentration also matters. Hydrated atomic force microscopy and rheological measurements corroborated that thin (15 ?m), medium (40 ?m), and thick (150 ?m) PEG hydrogels possessed Young's moduli in three distinct regimes, soft (20 kPa), intermediate (300 kPa), and stiff (1000 kPa). The attachment of two diverse bacteria, flagellated Gram-negative Escherichia coli and nonmotile Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus was assessed after a 24 h incubation on the nine PEG hydrogels. On the thickest PEG hydrogels (150 ?m), E. coli and S. aureus attachment increased with increasing hydrogel stiffness. However, when the hydrogel's thickness was reduced to 15 ?m, a substantially greater adhesion of E. coli and S. aureus was observed. Twelve times fewer S. aureus and eight times fewer E. coli adhered to thin-soft hydrogels than to thick-soft hydrogels. Although a full mechanism to explain this behavior is beyond the scope of this article, we suggest that because the Young's moduli of thin-soft and thick-soft hydrogels were statistically equivalent, potentially, the very stiff underlying glass slide was causing the thin-soft hydrogels to feel stiffer to the bacteria. These findings suggest a key takeaway design rule; to optimize fouling-resistance, hydrogel coatings should be thick and soft.

SUBMITTER: Kolewe KW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5785418 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Bacterial Adhesion Is Affected by the Thickness and Stiffness of Poly(ethylene glycol) Hydrogels.

Kolewe Kristopher W KW   Zhu Jiaxin J   Mako Natalie R NR   Nonnenmann Stephen S SS   Schiffman Jessica D JD  

ACS applied materials & interfaces 20180109 3


Despite lacking visual, auditory, and olfactory perception, bacteria sense and attach to surfaces. Many factors, including the chemistry, topography, and mechanical properties of a surface, are known to alter bacterial attachment, and in this study, using a library of nine protein-resistant poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels immobilized on glass slides, we demonstrate that the thickness or amount of polymer concentration also matters. Hydrated atomic force microscopy and rheological measureme  ...[more]

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