The presence of so-called reversible and irreversible protein adsorption on solid surfaces is well documented in the literature and represents the basis for the development of nanoparticles and implant materials… Click to show full abstract
The presence of so-called reversible and irreversible protein adsorption on solid surfaces is well documented in the literature and represents the basis for the development of nanoparticles and implant materials to control interactions in physiological environments. Here, using a series of complementary single-molecule tracking approaches appropriate for different timescales, we show that protein desorption kinetics is much more complex than the traditional reversible-irreversible binary picture. Instead, we find that the surface residence time distribution of adsorbed proteins transitions from power law to exponential behavior when measured over a large range of timescales (10-2-106 s). A comparison with macroscopic results obtained using a quartz crystal microbalance suggested that macroscopic measurements have generally failed to observe such nonequilibrium phenomena because they are obscured by ensemble-averaging effects. These findings provide new insights into the complex phenomena associated with protein adsorption and desorption.
               
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