Biocompatibility and Connectivity of Semiconductor Nanostructures for Cardiac Tissue Engineering Applications.
Roberto GaetaniYuriy DerevyanchukAndrea NotargiacomoMarialilia PeaMassimiliano RenziElisa MessinaFabrizio PalmaPublished in: Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Nano- or microdevices, enabling simultaneous, long-term, multisite, cellular recording and stimulation from many excitable cells, are expected to make a strategic turn in basic and applied cardiology (particularly tissue engineering) and neuroscience. We propose an innovative approach aiming to elicit bioelectrical information from the cell membrane using an integrated circuit (IC) bearing a coating of nanowires on the chip surface. Nanowires grow directly on the backend of the ICs, thus allowing on-site amplification of bioelectric signals with uniform and controlled morphology and growth of the NWs on templates. To implement this technology, we evaluated the biocompatibility of silicon and zinc oxide nanowires (NWs), used as a seeding substrate for cells in culture, on two different primary cell lines. Human cardiac stromal cells were used to evaluate the effects of ZnO NWs of different lengths on cell behavior, morphology and growth, while BV-2 microglial-like cells and GH4-C1 neuroendocrine-like cell lines were used to evaluate cell membrane-NW interaction and contact when cultured on Si NWs. As the optimization of the contact between integrated microelectronics circuits and cellular membranes represents a long-standing issue, our technological approach may lay the basis for a new era of devices exploiting the microelectronics' sensitivity and "smartness" to both improve investigation of biological systems and to develop suitable NW-based systems available for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- room temperature
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- reduced graphene oxide
- cell cycle arrest
- left ventricular
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- single cell
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- lps induced
- body composition
- healthcare
- signaling pathway
- stem cells
- high throughput
- health information
- computed tomography
- white matter
- neuropathic pain
- magnetic resonance
- acute kidney injury
- spinal cord injury
- magnetic resonance imaging
- sensitive detection
- multiple sclerosis
- label free
- nucleic acid
- thoracic surgery