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Modulation of Living Cell Behavior with Ultra-Low Fouling Polymer Brush Interfaces.

Ivana VíšováBarbora SmolkováMariia UzhytchakMarkéta VrabcováYulia ZhigunovaMilan HouskaFrantišek SurmanAndres de Los Santos PereiraOleg LunovAlexandr DejnekaHana Vaisocherová-Lísalová
Published in: Macromolecular bioscience (2020)
Ultra-low fouling and functionalizable coatings represent emerging surface platforms for various analytical and biomedical applications such as those involving examination of cellular interactions in their native environments. Ultra-low fouling surface platforms as advanced interfaces enabling modulation of behavior of living cells via tuning surface physicochemical properties are presented and studied. The state-of-art ultra-low fouling surface-grafted polymer brushes of zwitterionic poly(carboxybetaine acrylamide), nonionic poly(N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide), and random copolymers of carboxybetaine methacrylamide (CBMAA) and HPMAA [p(CBMAA-co-HPMAA)] with tunable molar contents of CBMAA and HPMAA are employed. Using a model Huh7 cell line, a systematic study of surface wettability, swelling, and charge effects on the cell growth, shape, and cytoskeleton distribution is performed. This study reveals that ultra-low fouling interfaces with a high content of zwitterionic moieties (>65 mol%) modulate cell behavior in a distinctly different way compared to coatings with a high content of nonionic HPMAA. These differences are attributed mostly to the surface hydration capabilities. The results demonstrate a high potential of carboxybetaine-rich ultra-low fouling surfaces with high hydration capabilities and minimum background signal interferences to create next-generation bioresponsive interfaces for advanced studies of living objects.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • living cells
  • stem cells
  • cell therapy
  • hiv infected
  • risk assessment
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • solid state
  • energy transfer