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Electroconductive agarose hydrogels modulate mesenchymal stromal cell adhesion and spreading through protein adsorption

Authors :
Casella, Alena
Casella, Alena
Panitch, Alyssa
Leach, J Kent
Casella, Alena
Casella, Alena
Panitch, Alyssa
Leach, J Kent
Source :
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A; vol 111, iss 5, 596-608; 1549-3296
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Electrically conductive biomaterials direct cell behavior by capitalizing on the effect of bioelectricity in tissue homeostasis and healing. Many studies have leveraged conductive biomaterials to influence cells and improve tissue healing, even in the absence of external stimulation. However, most studies using electroactive materials neglect characterizing how the inclusion of conductive additives affects the material's mechanical properties, and the interplay between substrate electrical and mechanical properties on cell behavior is poorly understood. Furthermore, mechanisms dictating how electrically conductive materials affect cell behavior in the absence of external stimulation are not explicit. In this study, we developed a mechanically and electrically tunable conductive hydrogel using agarose and the conductive polymer PEDOT:PSS. Under certain conditions, we observed that the hydrogel physical and electrical properties were decoupled. We then seeded human mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) onto the hydrogels and observed enhanced adhesion and spreading of MSCs on conductive substrates, regardless of the hydrogel mechanical properties, and despite the gels having no cell-binding sites. To explain this observation, we measured protein interaction with the gels and found that charged proteins adsorbed significantly more to conductive hydrogels. These data demonstrate that conductivity promotes cell adhesion, likely by facilitating increased adsorption of proteins associated with cell binding, providing a better understanding of the mechanism of action of electrically conductive materials.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A; vol 111, iss 5, 596-608; 1549-3296
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A vol 111, iss 5, 596-608 1549-3296
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449595732
Document Type :
Electronic Resource