Satomi Tomomi, Nagasaki Yukio, Kobayashi Hisatoshi, Otsuka Hidenori, Kataoka Kazunori
Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Tokyo University of Science, 1-3 Kagurazaka, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-8601, Japan.
Langmuir. 2007 Jun 5;23(12):6698-703. doi: 10.1021/la0624384. Epub 2007 May 5.
A wide variety of cells usually integrate and respond to the microscale environment, such as soluble protein factors, extracellular matrix proteins, and contacts with neighboring cells. To gain insight into cellular microenvironment design, we investigated two-dimensional microarray formation of endothelial cells on a micropatterned poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-brushed surface, based on the relationship between PEG chain density and cellular attachment. The patterned substrates consisted of two regions: the PEG surface that acts as a cell-resistant layer and the exposed substrate surface that promotes protein or cell adsorption. A PEG-brushed layer was constructed on a gold substrate using PEG with a mercapto group at the end of the chain. The density of the PEG-brushed layer increased substantially with repetitive adsorption/rinse cycles of PEG on the gold substrate, allowing marked reduction of nonspecific protein adsorption. These repeated adsorption/rinse cycles were further regulated by using longer (5 kDa) and shorter (2 kDa) PEG to construct PEG layers with different chain density, and subsequent micropatterning was achieved by plasma etching through a micropatterned metal mask. The effects of PEG chain density on pattern formation of cell attachment were determined on micropatterning of endothelial cells. The results indicated that cell pattern formation was strongly dependent on the PEG chain density and on the extent of protein adsorption. Notably, a PEG chain density high enough to inhibit outgrowth of endothelial cells from the cell-adhering region in the horizontal direction could be obtained only by employing formation of a short filler layer of PEG in the preconstructed longer PEG-brushed layer, which prevented nonspecific protein adsorption almost completely. In this way, a completely micropatterned array of endothelial cells with long-term viability was obtained. This clearly indicated the importance of a short underbrushed PEG layer in minimizing nonspecific protein adsorption for long-term maintenance of the active cell pattern. The strategy for cell patterning presented here can be employed in tissue engineering to study cell-cell and cell-surface interactions. It is also applicable for high-throughput screening and clinical diagnostics, as well as interfacing cellular and microfabricated components of biomedical microsystems.
各种各样的细胞通常会整合并响应微观环境,比如可溶性蛋白因子、细胞外基质蛋白以及与相邻细胞的接触。为深入了解细胞微观环境设计,我们基于聚乙二醇(PEG)链密度与细胞附着之间的关系,研究了在微图案化的聚乙二醇刷涂表面上内皮细胞的二维微阵列形成。图案化的基底由两个区域组成:作为细胞抗性层的PEG表面和促进蛋白质或细胞吸附的暴露基底表面。使用链端带有巯基的PEG在金基底上构建PEG刷涂层。随着PEG在金基底上重复吸附/冲洗循环,PEG刷涂层的密度大幅增加,从而显著减少非特异性蛋白质吸附。通过使用较长(5 kDa)和较短(2 kDa)的PEG构建具有不同链密度的PEG层,进一步调控这些重复的吸附/冲洗循环,随后通过微图案化金属掩膜进行等离子体蚀刻实现微图案化。在内皮细胞微图案化过程中确定了PEG链密度对细胞附着图案形成的影响。结果表明,细胞图案形成强烈依赖于PEG链密度和蛋白质吸附程度。值得注意的是,只有通过在预先构建的较长PEG刷涂层中形成短填充PEG层,才能获得足以抑制内皮细胞在水平方向从细胞黏附区域向外生长的PEG链密度,该短填充层几乎完全防止了非特异性蛋白质吸附。通过这种方式,获得了具有长期活力的完全微图案化的内皮细胞阵列。这清楚地表明了短的底层刷涂PEG层对于最小化非特异性蛋白质吸附以长期维持活性细胞图案的重要性。这里提出的细胞图案化策略可用于组织工程研究细胞 - 细胞和细胞 - 表面相互作用。它还适用于高通量筛选和临床诊断,以及生物医学微系统中细胞与微制造组件的接口。