{"title":"Trimethylamine N-oxide-derived zwitterion coating for polyurethane ureteral stents prevents encrustation formation.","authors":"Kaiguo Xia, Guang Chen, Bingbing Hou, Zhe Wang, Yaqi Zhu, Yuexian Xu, Shanfu Zhang, Qiang Xuan, Yezi You, Zongyao Hao","doi":"10.1016/j.actbio.2025.04.058","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>A ureteral stent with strong resistance to proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions is crucial for the safe treatment of urologic diseases. Generally, the proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions present in urine tend to bind to the stent surface, leading to aggregation, nucleation, and subsequent stent encrustation. Stent encrustation can induce or exacerbate urinary tract infections and obstructions, thereby seriously harming kidney function. Although hydrophilic coatings on ureteral stents can reduce the binding of proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions, encrustation still occurs. To date, preventing stent encrustation formation remains a significant challenge. Here, we grafted dense trimethylamine oxide (TMAO)-derived zwitterionic polymers onto the stent surface via a branched amplification strategy. These zwitterions can strongly bind water molecules, forming a stable hydration layer that repels proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions from adhering to the surface of the polyurethane ureteral stent, thus rendering the stent anti-encrustation. The results showed that the TMAO-derived zwitterion-coated stents exhibited a significantly reduced encrustation weight (13.8% of the original polyurethane stent) and demonstrated good safety. This approach offers a promising method for enhancing stent encrustation resistance. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This study successfully developed a TMAO-derived zwitterionic coating on the surface of a polyurethane stent, creating a superhydrophilic surface with a minimal contact angle of 5.2<sup>o</sup>. This surface effectively shields the stent from interactions with proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions in urine, demonstrating favorable anti-protein adsorption and antibacterial adhesion properties. The superhydrophilic surface formed by the TMAO-derived zwitterionic coating on the stents (PTMAO-s) provides strong anti-fouling resistance and enhanced anti-encrustation properties. Under identical conditions, the encrustation resistance of PTMAO-s is approximately 7.2-fold greater than that of original polyurethane stents (PU), 3.6-fold greater than Bard commercial stents, and 2.1-fold greater than betaine-coated stents (PSBG-s).</p>","PeriodicalId":93848,"journal":{"name":"Acta biomaterialia","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta biomaterialia","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2025.04.058","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A ureteral stent with strong resistance to proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions is crucial for the safe treatment of urologic diseases. Generally, the proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions present in urine tend to bind to the stent surface, leading to aggregation, nucleation, and subsequent stent encrustation. Stent encrustation can induce or exacerbate urinary tract infections and obstructions, thereby seriously harming kidney function. Although hydrophilic coatings on ureteral stents can reduce the binding of proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions, encrustation still occurs. To date, preventing stent encrustation formation remains a significant challenge. Here, we grafted dense trimethylamine oxide (TMAO)-derived zwitterionic polymers onto the stent surface via a branched amplification strategy. These zwitterions can strongly bind water molecules, forming a stable hydration layer that repels proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions from adhering to the surface of the polyurethane ureteral stent, thus rendering the stent anti-encrustation. The results showed that the TMAO-derived zwitterion-coated stents exhibited a significantly reduced encrustation weight (13.8% of the original polyurethane stent) and demonstrated good safety. This approach offers a promising method for enhancing stent encrustation resistance. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: This study successfully developed a TMAO-derived zwitterionic coating on the surface of a polyurethane stent, creating a superhydrophilic surface with a minimal contact angle of 5.2o. This surface effectively shields the stent from interactions with proteins, bacteria, and multivalent ions in urine, demonstrating favorable anti-protein adsorption and antibacterial adhesion properties. The superhydrophilic surface formed by the TMAO-derived zwitterionic coating on the stents (PTMAO-s) provides strong anti-fouling resistance and enhanced anti-encrustation properties. Under identical conditions, the encrustation resistance of PTMAO-s is approximately 7.2-fold greater than that of original polyurethane stents (PU), 3.6-fold greater than Bard commercial stents, and 2.1-fold greater than betaine-coated stents (PSBG-s).