Interactions of Tris with rutile surfaces and consequences for in vitro bioactivity testing
Azade YazdanYar, L\'ea Buswell, Delphin Pantaloni, Ulrich Aschauer,, Paul Bowen

TL;DR
This study reveals that Tris buffer strongly interacts with rutile surfaces, significantly influencing molecule adsorption and in vitro bioactivity test results, challenging its assumed inertness in biomedical testing.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of Tris interactions with titanium oxide surfaces using experimental and computational methods.
Findings
Tris strongly interacts with rutile surfaces.
Tris affects adsorption of other molecules.
Buffer concentration influences interaction strength.
Abstract
Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris) has been used as the buffer in bioactivity testing for over two decades and has become a standard choice for the scientific community. While it is believed to be non-interacting, the extent of its interactions with titanium oxide surfaces has not been systematically studied. Here, we use experimental (zeta potential measurements) and computational (molecular dynamics) approaches to evaluate the interaction of Tris with a rutile surface and how it affects the adsorption of other molecules relevant in biomedical in vitro testing. We show that the interaction of Tris with the rutile surface is strong and significantly affects the interaction of other organic residues with the surface. These strong interactions are compounded by the Tris concentration in the in vitro testing protocol which is much higher compared to other components. Our findings…
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