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Prechondrogenic ATDC5 Cell Attachment and Differentiation on Graphene Foam; Modulation by Surface Functionalization with Fibronectin
Author(s) -
Stephanie M. Frahs,
Jonathon C. Reeck,
Katie M. Yocham,
Anders Frederiksen,
Kiyo Fujimoto,
Crystal M. Scott,
Richard S. Beard,
Raquel J. Brown,
Trevor J. Lujan,
Ilia A. Solov’yov,
David Estrada,
Julia Thom Oxford
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.9b14670
Subject(s) - fibronectin , extracellular matrix , materials science , graphene , actin cytoskeleton , surface modification , microbiology and biotechnology , cytoskeleton , biophysics , nanotechnology , cell , chemistry , biochemistry , biology
Graphene foam holds promise for tissue engineering applications. In this study, graphene foam was used as a three-dimension scaffold to evaluate cell attachment, cell morphology, and molecular markers of early differentiation. The aim of this study was to determine if cell attachment and elaboration of an extracellular matrix would be modulated by functionalization of graphene foam with fibronectin, an extracellular matrix protein that cells adhere well to, prior to the establishment of three-dimensional cell culture. The molecular dynamic simulation demonstrated that the fibronectin-graphene interaction was stabilized predominantly through interaction between the graphene and arginine side chains of the protein. Quasi-static and dynamic mechanical testing indicated that fibronectin functionalization of graphene altered the mechanical properties of graphene foam. The elastic strength of the scaffold increased due to fibronectin, but the viscoelastic mechanical behavior remained unchanged. An additive effect was observed in the mechanical stiffness when the graphene foam was both coated with fibronectin and cultured with cells for 28 days. Cytoskeletal organization assessed by fluorescence microscopy demonstrated a fibronectin-dependent reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and an increase in actin stress fibers. Gene expression assessed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction of 9 genes encoding cell attachment proteins ( Cd44 , Ctnna1 , Ctnnb1 , Itga3 , Itga5 , Itgav , Itgb1 , Ncam1 , Sgce ), 16 genes encoding extracellular matrix proteins ( Col1a1 , Col2a1 , Col3a1 , Col5a1 , Col6a1 , Ecm1 , Emilin1 , Fn1 , Hapln1 , Lamb3 , Postn , Sparc , Spp1 , Thbs1 , Thbs2 , Tnc ), and 9 genes encoding modulators of remodeling ( Adamts1 , Adamts2 , Ctgf , Mmp14 , Mmp2 , Tgfbi , Timp1 , Timp2 , Timp3 ) indicated that graphene foam provided a microenvironment conducive to expression of genes that are important in early chondrogenesis. Functionalization of graphene foam with fibronectin modified the cellular response to graphene foam, demonstrated by decreases in relative gene expression levels. These findings illustrate the combinatorial factors of microscale materials properties and nanoscale molecular features to consider in the design of three-dimensional graphene scaffolds for tissue engineering applications.

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