Issue 11, 2014

Changing ligand number and type within nanocylindrical domains through kinetically constrained self-assembly – impacts of ligand ‘redundancy’ on human mesenchymal stem cell adhesion and morphology

Abstract

In this paper, we firstly describe a facile method by which sequential attachment of different adhesion peptides to a nanotopographical, self-assembled block copolymer cell culture surface is made possible through orthogonal click chemistry. Functionalization of polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide block copolymers (PS-PEO) with azide (PS-PEO-N3) and aminooxy (PS-PEO-ONH2) moieties permitted the use of orthogonal click chemistry protocols to sequentially add desired bioactive moieties. Thereafter, we show that co-self-assembly of non-functionalised PS-PEO with different amounts of these functionalized PS-PEOs produces polymer films having well-defined, hexagonally arrayed PEO nanocylinder domains, of near constant diameter (∼17 nm diameter) and lateral spacing (∼35 nm). The invariant diameters and lateral spacing of the nanodomains with changes in the amounts of PS-PEO-N3 and PS-PEO-ONH2 confirmed our ability to tune the number density of these functional groups locally within each PEO nanodomain. Stepwise conjugation of alkyne-terminated IKVAV or aldehyde-terminated RGD to the azide and aminooxy decorated nanodomains produced a series of substrates with increasing local number density of grafted adhesion peptides in each nanodomain. We then systematically investigated the impacts of ligand affinity and availability (leading to differing levels of redundancy) on cell integrin binding and adhesion behaviours. We show that with increasing numbers of single peptides (IKVAV or RGD) or with changes in the ratio of IKVAV and RGD peptides within each of the ∼17 nm nanodomains of these films, there was significant changes in the number of hMSCs adhered and substantial modulation of cell morphology, cytoskeletal actin stress fibres and focal adhesion maturation. We observed that increases in the ratio of RGD to IKVAV peptides within the constrained surface nanodomains greatly enhanced hMSC adhesion, and effectively modulated hMSC morphology, cytoskeletal actin structures and focal adhesion number and maturity between the two extremes noted for the single peptides. The results presented suggest that these self assembled block copolymer substrates regulate hMSC adhesion and morphology through modulation of ligand affinity and ligand redundancy, and hence the effectiveness of integrin binding and mechanotransduction signalling. These novel 2D polymer substrates offer encoded and defined cues for cell adhesion at length scales previously unrealised and the results of this investigation expose a new parameter set by which the surfaces of biomaterials may be tailored for stem cell culture, selection and fate.

Graphical abstract: Changing ligand number and type within nanocylindrical domains through kinetically constrained self-assembly – impacts of ligand ‘redundancy’ on human mesenchymal stem cell adhesion and morphology

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Apr 2014
Accepted
07 Aug 2014
First published
13 Aug 2014

Biomater. Sci., 2014,2, 1693-1705

Author version available

Changing ligand number and type within nanocylindrical domains through kinetically constrained self-assembly – impacts of ligand ‘redundancy’ on human mesenchymal stem cell adhesion and morphology

H. Li and J. J. Cooper-White, Biomater. Sci., 2014, 2, 1693 DOI: 10.1039/C4BM00109E

To request permission to reproduce material from this article, please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

If you are an author contributing to an RSC publication, you do not need to request permission provided correct acknowledgement is given.

If you are the author of this article, you do not need to request permission to reproduce figures and diagrams provided correct acknowledgement is given. If you want to reproduce the whole article in a third-party publication (excluding your thesis/dissertation for which permission is not required) please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

Read more about how to correctly acknowledge RSC content.

Social activity

Spotlight

Advertisements