Polyelectrolyte Films - Versatile Approach to Generate Well-Controlled Environments
for Tissue Engineering Applications
Tissue engineering, an emerging field in the area of human health care, combines
biology and materials science and engineering to generate products with suitable
biochemical and physiochemical performance to repair or replace portions of
or whole tissues (i.e., bone, cartilage, blood vessels, bladder, etc.).1
One of the challenges in tissue engineering applications is to preserve cells
normal physical activities on synthetic scaffolds and maintain tissue-specific
function.
Since cells in tissues adhere to and interact with their extracellular environment
via specialized cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) contacts,2
maintaining tissue-specific function of artificial tissues depends on cell/scaffold
and cell/cell interactions.3 in vivo growth
of tissue formation and maturation are the viability, proliferation, and spreading
of cells.
| Extracellular Matrix, also
referred to as ECM, is the extracellular part of animal tissue that
usually provides structural support to the animal cells in addition
to performing various other important functions.
Cell is the basic structural and functional
unit of all known living organisms. It is the smallest unit of an organism
that is classified as a living thing, and is often called the building
block of life.
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To improve each of these parameters, increasing efforts have been made to develop
new coatings to improve the biocompatibility of a given surface. The layer-by-layer
(LBL) molecular-level adsorption of polymers through different interactions
is now a well-established methodology for creating conformal thin film coatings
with precisely tuned physical, biochemical, and chemical properties.
This technique involves sequential adsorption of materials that can form intermolecular
interactions. Intermolecular interactions including opposite electrostatic interactions,
4 hydrogen bondings5,6
and acid-base interactions7,8 have
been used in building LBL self-assembled multilayer systems, or referred as
polyelectrolyte multilayer films. Such technique provides a versatile platform
for the assembly of materials and nanostructures of interest in the contexts
of functionalizing surfaces for tissue engineering applications.
Polyelectrolyte multilayers have been deposited on planar substrates and polymeric
electrospun fibers to explore their capability of manipulating the cell activities
such as proliferation and spreading. The electrospun fibers functionalized with
polyelectrolyte multilayer films can mimic the ECM which is a highly hydrated
network hosting three major components: fibrous elements (e.g. collagens, elastin
and reticulin), space filling molecules (e.g. glycosaminoglycans covalently
linked to proteins in the form of proteoglycans) and adhesive glycoproteins
(e.g. fibronectin, vitronectin and laminin).
Professor
Lei Zhai and his colleagues at the Nanoscience
Technology Center have explored the applicability of polyelectrolyte multilayers
for the patterning and manipulation of different mammalian cells using the Young's
modulus of multilayer films. By utilizing such different cellular behavior on
different surfaces, we have generated stable cellular patterns by creating multilayer
patterns using laser ablating through photo masks.
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Figure 1.
Microscope Images of Hippocampal cells day 20 of the culture (left panel)
and neonatal cardiac myocytes day 100 of the culture (right panel).
Scale bar depicts 100 µm. |
Figure 1 shows the patterns of cardiac cells on PAA/PAAm-bare glass patterns
and hippocampal cells on PAA/PAH-bare glass patterns. The cell patterns are
stable up to more than a hundred days. In comparison, the most commonly used
cell patterning material-poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) can achieve the stability
only for a couple of weeks.9 Polyelectrolytes functionalized
polymer nanofibers have also been used to promote the cell growth, and demonstrated
better cell compatibility compared to bare glass substrates (Figure 2).
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Figure 2.
(A) a scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of polymer nanofibers.
(B) the skeletal muscle C2C12 cells on glass substrate. (C) the skeletal
muscle C2C12 cells on polymer nanofibers. |
Polyelectrolyte films have offered not only a versatile approach to generate
well-controlled environments for tissue engineering applications, but also provide
a ideal platform for investigating cell/material and cell/cell interactions
from a fundamental research point of view.
Future research of polyelectrolyte films require collaboration with materials
scientists, biologist, and clinicians to investigate the films stability, and
the response of the immune systems and phagocytic cells.
Reference
1. Langer, R & Vacanti JP, Tissue engineering. Science
260, 920-6; 1993.
2. H. K. Kleinman, D. Philp and M. P. Hoffman, Curr. Opin. Biotechnol.,
2003, 14, 526.
3. Li, M.; Mondrinos, M. J.; Gandhi, M. R.; Ko, F. K.; Weiss,
A. S.; Lelkes, P. Biomaterials 2005, 26, 5999.
4. Decher,G. "Fuzzy Nanoassemblies: Toward Layered Polymeric
Multicomposites" Science 1997, 277, 1232.
5. Yang, S.; Rubner, M. F. "Micropatterning of Polymer
Thin Films with pH-Sensitive and Cross-linkable Hydrogen-Bonded Polyelectrolyte
Multilayers" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 2100.
6. Sukhishvili, S. A.; Granick, S. "Layered, Erasable
Polymer Multilayers Formed by Hydrogen-Bonded Sequential Self-Assembly"
Macromolecules 2002, 35, 301.
7. Yam, C.; Kakkar, A. K. "Molecular Self-Assembly of
Dihydroxy-Terminated Molecules via Acid-Base Hydrolytic Chemistry on Silica
Surfaces: Step-by-Step Multilayered Thin Film Construction" Langmuir 1999,
15, 3807.
8. Li, D.; Jiang, Y.; Li, C.; Wu, Z.; Chen, X.; Li, Y. "Self-assembly
of Polyaniline/polyacrylic Acid Films via Acid-Base Reaction Induced Deposition"
Polymer 1999, 40, 7065.
9. Dhir, V.; Natarajan, A.; Stanceescu, M.; Chunder, A.; Bhargava,
N.; Das, M.; Zhai, L.; Molnar, P. "Patterning of Diverse Mammalian Cell
Types in Serum Free Medium with Photoablation" Biotechnol. Prog. 2009,
25, 594.
Copyright AZoNano.com, Professor Lei Zhai (University of Central
Florida)
Date Added: Nov 4, 2009
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