PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY OF BIOINTERFACES
Academic Year 2018/2019 - 2° YearCredit Value: 6
Scientific field: CHIM/02 - Physical chemistry
Taught classes: 21 hours
Laboratories: 36 hours
Term / Semester: 1°
Learning Objectives
The course aims to provide insights into the chemical and physical concepts already covered in other disciplines of the B.D. and M.D. courses, such as physics of biological systems, chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry. The course contents relate to the basic principles and properties of surfaces and solid-liquid interface. The aim of the course is to provide the tools necessary to the understanding of the various types of interactions that take place between cells and tissues and their natural or artificial environment, thermodynamic and kinetic aspects of protein-biomaterial interface, with emphasis on the fundamental role of water at the biointerfaces. Another training objective of the course is to explain how cellular processes such as adhesion, differentiation and proliferation may be influenced by mechanical (viscoelasticity), physical (topography) and chemical (surface free energy, composition and structure) properties of the surfaces and how these can be modulated through the surface tailoring, even on the nanometer scale, and / or the change of the environmental conditions (chemical stimulus, physical and / or biological).
The course of Physical Chemistry of Biointerfaces will also provide students with the theoretical knowledge for the comparison of experimental results with those of calculation, relative to case studies of biointerfaces between cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM) and between cells, ECM and medical devices. The student at the end of the course must demonstrate knowledge of the essential characteristics of biointerfaces and be able to solve, both qualitatively and quantitatively, simple problems about the biomolecule-material interaction.
In the laboratory the student will take awareness not only of the fundamental role carried out by this discipline in various scientific and technological fields (of drug transport and release, biosensors, imaging), but also will make practice with processes of chemical synthesis of nanoparticles and spectroscopic and microscopic characterization techniques of biointerfaces.
Course Structure
Frontal lessons with projector and blackboard; exercises.
Detailed Course Content
Physical chemistry of interfaces. Introduction to the concept of biointerface. Definitions and properties of surfaces. Nano-bio-interfaces.
Theoretical and applied aspects of biointerfaces. Biomaterials. Biosensors. Bioelectronics. Tissue engineering. Nanomedicine and theranostics.
Intermolecular forces and self-assembling processes. Structural aspects of dry and wet surfaces (double layer), energy aspects (interface energies, superhydrophobicity). Charged surface and colloid surface chemistry. Elasticity and viscoelasticity of biomolecular systems. Case studies of biomolecular self-assembling systems.
Biomaterials. Preparation of biomaterials and biomedical implants; physico-chemical characterization of their surface properties. The reaction of the outer body and encapsulation system.
Microfabrication and nanofabrication applied to biointerfaces. Structuring of surfaces; Molecular imprinting; self-assembling monolayers; techniques of micro- and nanomaterials synthesis. Influence of topography, mechanical properties and chemical groups on the cellular response.
Examples of biological characterization of surfaces and interfaces. Supported lipid bilayer membranes (SLB). Comparison between acoustic (quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring, QCM-D), optical (surface plasmon resonance SPR; oprical waveguide light spectroscopy, OWLS) and microscopic (atomic force microscopy, AFM; laser scanning confocal microscopy, LSM) techniques
Biointerfaces at the nanoscale. Interaction between cells and their biological environment, cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interaction. Adsorption of proteins from a biological medium. Interaction between proteins and a solid surface. The role of water in the biomolecule adsorption onto a solid surface. The 'Goldilocks' surface. Effects of protein surface concentration, kinetics and conformation on cell behavior.
Laboratory exercises on model biointerface systems of interest in drug delivery, biosensors and imaging.
Textbook Information
1. Handouts and lecture slides provided by the teacher
2. P. W. Atkins, J. de Paula- Chimica fisica biologica - Zanichelli
3. W. Pauli - Physical Chemistry in the Service of Medicine - Wiley &Sons
4. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Nanomedicine and Nanobiotechnology - John Wiley & Sons
5. H. Ohshima - Biophysical Chemistry of Biointerfaces - Wiley
6. B.D. Ratner, A.S. Hoffman - BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE: An Introduction to Materials in Medicine - Elsevier