Building an Appetite for Hydroxyapatite QSensors
Olivia Uddenberg Oct 6, ’15 ~ 3 min

Building an Appetite for Hydroxyapatite QSensors

Hydroxyapatite in biomaterial and medical device research

Within biomaterials research and development, hydroxyapatite (HA) is well known for its biocompatible properties, particularly in bone bonding, and for its potency of rapid integration into the human body. Orthopaedic and dental devices are often coated with hydroxyapatite to facilitate integration and acceptance by human tissue. 

QSense hydroxyapatite sensor

To help out in the seek for better understanding of protein adsorption and behavior in human tissue/implant applications, QSense has developed ready-to-use sensors coated with a thin, stable, and uniform crystalline Hydroxyapatite film. The coating has also drawn attention from toothpaste manufacturers. 

Liquid phase protein adsorption behavior affect biocompatibility of biomaterials and medical devices

An interesting example of studies on protein behavior onto HA using QCM-D, is the work carried out by a group of researchers in Japan and Sweden. They found that using QCM-D with a HA coated sensor was particularly useful for analysis of liquid phase changes of proteins on the surface. Liquid phase protein adsorption behavior affect biocompatibility of biomaterials and medical devices, and is therefore of biological, medical and industrial Importance. In all, six different proteins (HSA, Catalase, IgG, Hemoglobin, Lysozyme and Cytochrome c) were investigated and the results of this work has been published in the paper "Protein Adsorption on Hydroxyapatite Nano-crystals with Quartz Crystal Microbalance Technique" (Key Engineering Materials, Vols 361-363 (2008) pp 1119-1122).Protein adsorption on hydroxyapatite

The proteins exhibited very different behavior patterns in relation to adsorption. The acidic proteins (HAS and Catalase) adsorbed as a monolayer, where the internal structure remained unchanged. This is seen as a straight line in the Q-Sense-unique ΔD/Δf plots. For the neutral and basic proteins, notably Hemoglobin, the same plot clearly showed two distinct adsorption phases. This is because the neutral and basic proteins could cause conformational changes with the adsorbed amount of proteins. Different regions identified in the ΔD/Δf plot reflect different rigidity of the protein film during adsorption, usually caused by changes in water content and/or structural properties.

The researchers concluded that the QCM-D technique plays an important role in understanding the interaction between proteins and the HA surface.

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