Bioactivation of Spider Silk with Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor for in Vitro Cell Culture: A Step toward Creation of Artificial ECM.
Naresh ThatikondaLinnea NilebäckAdam KempeMona WidheMy HedhammarPublished in: ACS biomaterials science & engineering (2018)
Presentation of immobilized growth factors with retained bioactivity remains a challenge in the field of tissue engineering. In the present study, we propose a strategy to covalently conjugate a pleiotropic growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to a partial spider silk protein at gene level. The resulting silk-bFGF fusion protein has the propensity to self-assemble into silk-like fibers, and also surface coatings, as confirmed by quartz crystal microbalance studies. Functionality of the silk-bFGF coating to bind its cognate receptor was confirmed with surface plasmon resonance studies. As a step toward the creation of an artificial ECM, the silk-bFGF protein was mixed with FN-silk, an engineered spider silk protein with enhanced cell adhesive properties. Bioactivity of the thereby obtained combined silk was confirmed by successful culture of primary human endothelial cells on coatings and integrated within fibers, even in culture medium without supplemented growth factors. Together, these findings show that silk materials bioactivated with growth factors can be used for in vitro cell culture studies, and have potential as a tissue engineering scaffold.