Title of article :
Human microvascular endothelial cell growth and migration on biomimetic surfactant polymers
Author/Authors :
Sharon M. Sagnella، نويسنده , , Faina Kligman، نويسنده , , Eric H. Anderson، نويسنده , , Jacqueline E. King، نويسنده , , Gurunathan Murugesan، نويسنده , , Roger E. Marchant، نويسنده , , Kandice Kottke-Marchant، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
11
From page :
1249
To page :
1259
Abstract :
Successful engineering of a tissue-incorporated vascular prosthesis requires cells to proliferate and migrate on the scaffold. Here, we report on a series of “ECM-like” biomimetic surfactant polymers that exhibit quantitative control over the proliferation and migrational properties of human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC). The biomimetic polymers consist of a poly(vinyl amine) (PVAm) backbone with hexanal branches and varying ratios of cell binding peptide (RGD) to carbohydrate (maltose). Proliferation and migration behavior of HMVEC was investigated using polymers containing RGD: maltose ratios of 100:0, 75:25 and 50:50, and compared with fibronectin (FN) coated glass (1 μg/cm2). A radial Teflon fence migration assay was used to examine HMVEC migration at 12 h intervals over a 48 h period. Migration was quantified using an inverted optical microscope, and HMVEC were examined by confocal microscopy for actin and focal adhesion organization/ arrangement. Over the range of RGD ligand density studied ( 0.19–0.6 peptides/nm2), our results show HMVEC migration decreases with increasing RGD density in the polymer. HMVEC were least motile on the 100% RGD polymer ( 0.38–0.6 peptides/nm2) with an average migration of 0.20 mm2/h in area covered, whereas HMVEC showed the fastest migration of 0.48±0.06 mm2/h on the 50% RGD surface ( 0.19–0.30 peptides/nm2). In contrast, cell proliferation increased with increasing surface peptide density; proliferation on the 50% RGD surface was 1.5%±0.06/h compared with 2.2%±0.07/h on the 100% RGD surface. Our results show that surface peptide density affects cellular functions such as growth and migration, with the highest peptide density supporting the most proliferation but the slowest migration.
Keywords :
Biomimetic material , endothelial cell , migration , cell proliferation , RGD peptide
Journal title :
Biomaterials
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Biomaterials
Record number :
545303
Link To Document :
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