4.5 Article

Influence of substratum hydrophobicity on salivary pellicles: organization or composition?

Journal

BIOFOULING
Volume 30, Issue 9, Pages 1123-1132

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08927014.2014.974155

Keywords

salivary pellicle; SDS-PAGE; immunoblotting; cystatin; amylase; mucin

Funding

  1. Anandamahidol Foundation
  2. Swedish Defence Materiel Administration (FMV)
  3. Malmo University
  4. Gustaf Th. Ohlsson Foundation
  5. Swedish Laryng Foundation

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Different physico-chemical properties (eg adsorption kinetics, thickness, viscoelasticity, and mechanical stability) of adsorbed salivary pellicles depend on different factors, including the properties (eg charge, roughness, wettability, and surface chemistry) of the substratum. Whether these differences in the physico-chemical properties are a result of differences in the composition or in the organization of the pellicles is not known. In this work, the influence of substratum wettability on the composition of the pellicle was studied. For this purpose, pellicles eluted from substrata of different but well-characterized wettabilities were examined by means of sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The results showed that substratum hydrophobicity did not have a major impact on pellicle composition. In all substrata, the major pellicle components were found to be cystatins, amylases and large glycoproteins, presumably mucins. In turn, interpretation of previously reported data based on the present results suggests that variations in substratum wettability mostly affect the organization of the pellicle components.

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