Issue 16, 2010

Stereochemistry triggered differential cell behaviours on chiral polymer surfaces

Abstract

One of the distinct biochemical signatures of life is the high chiral preference of biomolecules that compose the organisms, e.g.L-amino acids, D-sugars, L-phospholipids. As a result, many biological and physiological processes are greatly influenced by the chirality of biomolecules. This inspires the introduction of chiral effects into biomaterials research. For this purpose, we developed a novel chiral polymer brush film system containing amino acid units and report that the stereochemistry of the polymer films significantly influences the cell/substrate interaction. With two adhesive cell lines—COS-7 and bEnd.3 as examples, here we report a study of differential cell behaviors on chiral polymer film. We show that the cells can adhere, grow, spread, and assemble much better on the L-amino acid based polymer film than on the corresponding D film, although their chemical and other physical properties are all the same, indicating that the L configuration of the polymer film has better cytocompatibility than the D configuration. It not only implies a novel strategy for the design of new generation of biomaterials and devices based on the chiral effect, but may also add important knowledge to the understanding the origin of chiral preference in biosystems.

Graphical abstract: Stereochemistry triggered differential cell behaviours on chiral polymer surfaces

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Mar 2010
Accepted
12 May 2010
First published
30 Jun 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 3851-3855

Stereochemistry triggered differential cell behaviours on chiral polymer surfaces

X. Wang, H. Gan, T. Sun, B. Su, H. Fuchs, D. Vestweber and S. Butz, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 3851 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00151A

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