Enhanced initial protein adsorption on an engineered nanostructured cubic zirconia
R. F. Sabirianov, A. Rubinstein, F. Namavar

TL;DR
This study computationally investigates how nanostructured cubic zirconia surfaces enhance the initial adsorption of fibronectin, revealing electrostatic interactions as a key factor in biocompatibility improvements.
Contribution
It introduces an atomistic model and simulation approach to analyze protein adsorption on nanostructured zirconia surfaces, highlighting the role of electrostatics in enhanced biocompatibility.
Findings
Nanostructured zirconia increases protein adsorption energy.
Electrostatic interactions dominate in enhanced adsorption.
Optimal protein orientation minimizes adsorption energy.
Abstract
Motivated by experimentally observed biocompatibility enhancement of nanoengineered cubic zirconia ZrO2 coatings to mesenchymal stromal cells, we have carried out computational analysis of the initial immobilization of one of known structural fragment of the adhesive protein (fibronectin) on the corresponding surface. We constructed an atomistic model of the zirconia nano-hillock of 3-fold symmetry based on AFM and TEM images. First-principle quantum-mechanical calculations show a substantial variation of electrostatic potential at the hillock due to the presence of surface features such as edges and vertexes. Using an implemented Monte Carlo simulated annealing method we found the orientation of the immobilized protein on the zirconia surface (both flat and nanostructured) and contribution of the each amino acid residue from the protein sequence to the adsorption energy. Accounting for…
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