Quantitative Control of Protein and Cell Interaction with Nanostructured Surfaces by Cluster Assembling

被引:42
|
作者
Schulte, Carsten [1 ,2 ]
Podesta, Alessandro [1 ,2 ]
Lenardi, Cristina [1 ,2 ]
Tedeschi, Gabriella [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Milani, Paolo [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Milan, Ctr Interdisciplinare Mat & Interfacce Nanostrutt, Via Celoria 16, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[2] Univ Milan, Dipartimento Fis, Via Celoria 16, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[3] Univ Milan, CIMAINA, Via Celoria 16, I-20133 Milan, Italy
[4] Univ Milan, Dipartimento Med Vet, Via Celoria 16, I-20133 Milan, Italy
关键词
WETTABILITY; ADSORPTION; ROUGHNESS; FILMS; DEPOSITION; MATRIX; CHARGE; TIO2; DIFFERENTIATION; NANOTOPOGRAPHY;
D O I
10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00433
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
The development of smart prosthetics, scaffolds, and biomaterials for tissue engineering and organ-on-a chip devices heavily depends on the understanding and control of biotic/abiotic interfaces. In recent years, the nanometer scale emerged as the predominant dimension for processes impacting on protein adsorption and cellular responses on surfaces. In this context, the extracellular matrix (ECM) can be seen as the prototype for an intricate natural structure assembled by nanoscale building blocks forming highly variable nanoscale configurations, dictating cellular behavior and fate. How exactly the ECM nanotopography influences mechanotransduction, that is, the cellular capacity to convert information received from the ECM into appropriate responses, remains partially understood due to the complexity of the involved biological structures, limiting also the attempts to artificially reproduce the nanoscale complexity of the ECM. In this Account, we describe and discuss our strategies for the development of an efficient and large-scale bottom-up approach to fabricate surfaces with multiscale controlled disorder as substrates to study quantitatively the effect of nanoscale topography on biological entities. Our method is based on the use of supersonic cluster beam deposition (SCBD) to assemble, on a substrate, neutral clusters produced in the gas phase and accelerated by a supersonic expansion. The assembling of clusters in the ballistic deposition regime follows simple scaling laws, allowing the quantitative control of surface roughness and asperity layout over large areas. Due to their biocompatibility, we focused on transition metal oxide nanostructured surfaces assembled by titania and zirconia clusters. We demonstrated the engineering of structural and functional properties of the cluster-assembled surfaces with high relevance for interactions at the biotic/abiotic interface. We observed that isoelectric point and wettability, crucial parameters for the adhesion of biological entities on surfaces, are strongly influenced and controlled by the nanoscale roughness. By developing a high-throughput method (protein surface interaction micro array, PSIM), we characterized quantitatively the capacity of the nanostructured surfaces to adsorb proteins, showing that with increasing roughness the adsorption rises beyond what could be expected by the increase in specific area, paralleled by an almost linear decrease in protein binding affinity. We also determined that the spatial layout of the surface asperities effectively perceived by the cells mimics at the nanoscale the topographical ECM characteristics. The interaction with these features consequently regulates parameters significant for cell adhesion and mechanotransductive signaling, such as integrin clustering, focal adhesion maturation, and the correlated cellular mechanobiology, eventually impacting the cellular program and differentiation, as we specifically showed for neuronal cells.
引用
收藏
页码:231 / 239
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cluster assembling of nanostructured carbon films
    Milani, P
    Podesta, A
    Piseri, P
    Barborini, E
    Lenardi, C
    Castelnovo, C
    DIAMOND AND RELATED MATERIALS, 2001, 10 (02) : 240 - 247
  • [2] Blood protein interaction with nanostructured glycocalyx mimetic surfaces
    Hedayati, Mohammadhasan
    Reynolds, Melissa
    Krapf, Diego
    Kipper, Matt
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 256
  • [3] Designing nanostructured block copolymer surfaces to control protein adhesion
    Schricker, Scott R.
    Palacio, Manuel L. B.
    Bhushan, Bharat
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 2012, 370 (1967): : 2348 - 2380
  • [4] Interaction of Lipid Membrane with Nanostructured Surfaces
    Roiter, Yuri
    Ornatska, Maryna
    Rammohan, Aravind R.
    Balakrishnan, Jitendra
    Heine, David R.
    Minko, Sergiy
    LANGMUIR, 2009, 25 (11) : 6287 - 6299
  • [5] Photoemission investigations on nanostructured TiO2 grown by cluster assembling
    Caruso, T.
    Lenardi, C.
    Mazza, T.
    Policicchio, A.
    Bongiorno, G.
    Agostino, R. G.
    Chiarello, G.
    Colavita, E.
    Finetti, P.
    Prince, K. C.
    Ducati, C.
    Piseri, P.
    Milani, P.
    SURFACE SCIENCE, 2007, 601 (13) : 2688 - 2691
  • [6] Erythrocyte interaction with titanium nanostructured surfaces
    Virk, Harvinder Singh
    Popat, Ketul C.
    IN VITRO MODELS, 2022, 1 (4-5): : 347 - 363
  • [7] Nanostructured surfaces investigated by quantitative morphological studies
    Perani, Martina
    Carapezzi, Stefania
    Mutta, Geeta Rani
    Cavalcoli, Daniela
    NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2016, 27 (18)
  • [8] Simulations of Protein Adsorption on Nanostructured Surfaces
    Berardo M. Manzi
    Marco Werner
    Elena P. Ivanova
    Russell J. Crawford
    Vladimir A. Baulin
    Scientific Reports, 9
  • [9] Simulations of Protein Adsorption on Nanostructured Surfaces
    Manzi, Berardo M.
    Werner, Marco
    Ivanova, Elena P.
    Crawford, Russell J.
    Baulin, Vladimir A.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [10] Interaction of Bacterial Cells with Cluster-Assembled Nanostructured Titania Surfaces: An Atomic Force Microscopy Study
    Singh, Ajay Vikram
    Galluzzi, Massimilano
    Borghi, Francesca
    Indrieri, Marco
    Vyas, Varun
    Podesta, Alessandro
    Gade, W. N.
    JOURNAL OF NANOSCIENCE AND NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2013, 13 (01) : 77 - 85