Part 1 of these studies described poly(methyl methacrylate-r-polyoxyethylene methacrylate) P(MMA-r-POEM) comb polymers that present Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptides at a surface in nanoscale clusters on a protein-resistant background for control of cell adhesion. Here in part 2, we examine surface segregation of these peptide-modified and unmodified comb polymers blended with polylactide (PLA) as a self-assembly approach suitable for surface modification of porous tissue engineering scaffolds. Multiple thermodynamic driving forces for surface enrichment of the comb polymer are exploited by annealing PLA/P(MMA-r-POEM) blends above the glass transition of the blend components but below the melting point of PLA, while in contact with water. Predictions of the interfacial composition profiles of annealed blends were made using a self-consistent field (SCF) lattice model. The calculations predict strong enrichment of the comb in the top approximately 50 A of blends, and organization of comb molecules in quasi-2D conformations at the interface, similar to the apparent structure of pure comb surfaces in contact with water described in part 1. Experimentally, PLA/comb blend surfaces were characterized by contact angle measurements, XPS, quantification of ligand-cluster surface density and stability by AFM and fluorescent nanosphere labeling, and cell attachment assays. These data were consistent with SCF predictions, showing significant enrichment of the comb at water-annealed surfaces and RGD cluster densities consistent with 2D conformations for comb molecules in the surface layer. Bulk miscibility of the blends was verified by dynamic rheometry, small-angle neutron scattering, DSC and X-ray diffraction studies. Surface segregation of combs provided tunable cell adhesion on PLA through surface-localized nanoclusters of RGD atop a cell-resistant background.
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