INEB
INEB
TitleAdsorption of albumin on prosthetic materials: Implication for tribological behavior
Publication TypeJournal Article
2006
AuthorsSerro, AP, Gispert, MP, Martins, MCL, Brogueira, P, Colaço, R, Saramago, B
JournalJournal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part AJ. Biomed. Mater. Res. Part A
Volume78
Issue3
Pagination581 - 589
Date Published2006///
00219304 (ISSN)
Adsorption, Albumin, Albumin adsorption, Albumins, Alumina, aluminum oxide, article, Atomic force microscopy, balanced salt solution, Biocompatible Materials, Body fluids, bovine serum albumin, chromium derivative, Cobalt alloy, Cobalt alloys, cobalt derivative, force, Friction, iodine 125, isotope labeling, joint fracture, Joints (anatomy), lubrication, macromolecule, metal, molecular weight, molybdenum, orthopedic prosthesis, orthopedics, Polyethylenes, polymer, Prostheses and Implants, prosthesis material, Prosthetics, protein, Proteins, Pseudosynovial fluid, Stainless steel, Thermodynamics, Tribology, ultra high molecular weight polyethylene, Ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE), X ray photoelectron spectroscopy
The orthopedic prosthesis used to substitute damaged natural joints are lubricated by a pseudosynovial fluid that contains biological macromolecules with potential boundary lubrication properties. Proteins are some of those macromolecules whose role in the lubrication process is not yet completely understood. In a previous work, we investigated the influence of the presence of albumin, the major synovial protein, upon the tribological behavior of three of the most used pairs of artificial joint materials: ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) against counterfaces of alumina, CoCrMo alloy, and 316L stainless steel. Albumin was found to cause a significant decrease in the friction coefficient when the counterfaces were metallic because transfer of UHMWPE was avoided, but this effect was much weaker in the case of alumina. The objective of the present work was to look for an explanation for these differences in tribological behavior in terms of albumin adsorption. With this goal, studies on adsorption of bovine serum albumin (BSA) on the counterface materials, from a biological model fluid (Hanks' balanced salt solution), were carried out using radiolabeled albumin ( 125I-BSA), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy. The conclusion from all techniques is that the driving force for albumin adsorption is higher on the metals than on alumina. These results confirm that the greater the amount of protein adsorbed on the counterface, the more efficient is the protection against the transfer of polymeric film to the counterface. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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