McNally Amy K, Jones Jacqueline A, Macewan Sarah R, Colton Erica, Anderson James M
Department of Pathology, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
J Biomed Mater Res A. 2008 Aug;86(2):535-43. doi: 10.1002/jbm.a.31658.
An in vitro system of interleukin (IL)-4-induced foreign body giant cell (FBGC) formation was utilized to define the adhesion protein substrate(s) that promotes this aspect of the foreign body reaction on biomedical polymers. Human monocytes were cultured on cell culture polystyrene surfaces that had been pre-adsorbed with a synthetic arginine-glycine-aspartate peptide previously found to support optimal FBGC formation, or with various concentrations of potential physiological protein substrates, i.e. complement C3bi, collagen types I or IV, fibrinogen, plasma fibronectin, fibroblast fibronectin, laminin, thrombospondin, vitronectin, or von Willebrand factor. Cultures were evaluated on days 0 (1.5 h), 3, and 7 by May-Grünwald/Giemsa staining. Initial monocyte adhesion occurred on all adsorbed proteins. However, by day 7 of culture, only vitronectin was striking in its ability to support significant macrophage adhesion, development, and fusion leading to FBGC formation. Vitronectin supported high degrees of FBGC formation at an absorption concentration between 5 and 25 microg/mL. These findings suggest that adsorbed vitronectin is critical in the collective events that support and promote FBGC formation on biomedical polymers, and that the propensity for vitronectin adsorption may underlie the material surface chemistry dependency of FBGC formation.
利用白细胞介素(IL)-4诱导异物巨细胞(FBGC)形成的体外系统,来确定促进生物医学聚合物上异物反应这一方面的黏附蛋白底物。将人单核细胞培养在细胞培养聚苯乙烯表面,这些表面预先吸附了先前发现能支持最佳FBGC形成的合成精氨酸-甘氨酸-天冬氨酸肽,或吸附了各种浓度的潜在生理蛋白底物,即补体C3bi、I型或IV型胶原、纤维蛋白原、血浆纤连蛋白、成纤维细胞纤连蛋白、层粘连蛋白、血小板反应蛋白、玻连蛋白或血管性血友病因子。在第0天(1.5小时)、第3天和第7天通过May-Grünwald/Giemsa染色评估培养物。最初的单核细胞黏附发生在所有吸附的蛋白质上。然而,到培养第7天时,只有玻连蛋白在支持显著的巨噬细胞黏附、发育和融合从而导致FBGC形成的能力方面表现突出。玻连蛋白在5至25微克/毫升的吸附浓度下支持高度的FBGC形成。这些发现表明,吸附的玻连蛋白在支持和促进生物医学聚合物上FBGC形成的集体事件中至关重要,并且玻连蛋白吸附的倾向可能是FBGC形成对材料表面化学依赖性的基础。