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Submolecular Ligand Size and Spacing for Cell Adhesion.

Yuri KimThomas Myeongseok KooRamar ThangamMyeong Soo KimWoo Young JangNayeon KangSunhong MinSeong Yeol KimLetao YangHyunsik HongHee Joon JungEui Kwan KohKapil D PatelSungkyu LeeHong En FuYoo Sang JeonBum Chul ParkSoo Young KimSteve ParkJunmin LeeLuo GuDong-Hyun KimTae-Hyung KimKi-Bum LeeWoong Kyo JeongRamasamy PaulmuruganYoung Keun KimHeemin Kang
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Cell adhesion occurs when integrin recognizes and binds to Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) ligands present in fibronectin. In this work, submolecular ligand size and spacing are tuned via template-mediated in situ growth of nanoparticles for dynamic macrophage modulation. To tune liganded gold nanoparticle (GNP) size and spacing from 3 to 20 nm, in situ localized assemblies of GNP arrays on nanomagnetite templates are engineered. 3 nm-spaced ligands stimulate the binding of integrin, which mediates macrophage-adhesion-assisted pro-regenerative polarization as compared to 20 nm-spaced ligands, which can be dynamically anchored to the substrate for stabilizing integrin binding and facilitating dynamic macrophage adhesion. Increasing the ligand size from 7 to 20 nm only slightly promotes macrophage adhesion, not observed with 13 nm-sized ligands. Increasing the ligand spacing from 3 to 17 nm significantly hinders macrophage adhesion that induces inflammatory polarization. Submolecular tuning of ligand spacing can dominantly modulate host macrophages.
Keyphrases
  • cell adhesion
  • photodynamic therapy
  • adipose tissue
  • stem cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • cell therapy
  • cystic fibrosis
  • bone marrow
  • amino acid