Endothelialization of chitosan porous conduits via immobilization of a recombinant fibronectin fragment (rhFNIII7–10)


Autoria(s): Amaral, I. F.; Neiva, I.; Silva, F. Ferreira da; Sousa, Susana; Piloto, A. M.; Lopes, C. D. F.; Barbosa, Mário A.; Kirkpatrick, C. J.; Pêgo, A. P.
Data(s)

17/01/2014

17/01/2014

2013

Resumo

The present study aimed to develop a pre-endothelialized chitosan (CH) porous hollowed scaffold for application in spinal cord regenerative therapies. CH conduits with different degrees of acetylation (DA; 4% and 15%) were prepared, characterized (microstructure, porosity and water uptake) and functionalized with a recombinant fragment of human fibronectin (rhFNIII7–10). Immobilized rhFNIII7–10 was characterized in terms of amount (125I-radiolabelling), exposure of cell-binding domains (immunofluorescence) and ability to mediate endothelial cell (EC) adhesion and cytoskeletal rearrangement. Functionalized conduits revealed a linear increase in immobilized rhFNIII7–10 with rhFNIII7–10 concentration, and, for the same concentration, higher amounts of rhFNIII7–10 on DA 4% compared with DA 15%. Moreover, rhFNIII7–10 concentrations as low as 5 and 20 lgml 1 in the coupling reaction were shown to provide DA 4% and 15% scaffolds, respectively, with levels of exposed cell-binding domains exceeding those observed on the control (DA 4% scaffolds incubated in a 20 lgml 1 human fibronectin solution). These grafting conditions proved to be effective in mediating EC adhesion/cytoskeletal organization on CH with DA 4% and 15%, without affecting the endothelial angiogenic potential. rhFNIII7–10 grafting to CH could be a strategy of particular interest in tissue engineering applications requiring the use of endothelialized porous matrices with tunable degradation rates.

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actbio.2012.10.029

1742-7061/$

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.22/3343

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Relação

Acta Biomaterialia; Vol. 9, Issue 3

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S174270611200517X

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Three-dimensional scaffolds #Surface grafting #Protein radiolabelling #Protein conformation #Spinal cord injury
Tipo

article