Title :
Control of human skin cell adhesion, proliferation and migration by microengineered substrata: transposition from solid phase to clinically relevant materials
Author :
Sutherland, J. ; Smith, A.G. ; Egan, A.C. ; Denyer, M.C. ; Britland, S.T.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Pharmacy, Bradford Univ., UK
Abstract :
The present quantitative time-lapse videomicroscopical study demonstrates that adhesion and migration of human keratinocytes, dermal fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in dissociated culture can be oriented and accelerated on solid-phase substrata comprising microtopography and micropatterned surface chemistry. Greater precision in the control of cell behaviour was attempted using microtopographic ´ratchet´ devices intended only to allow unidirectional cell migration. The data suggests that that cell-specific guidance cues may preferentially influence subpopulations within mixed cultures, and that cell phenotype is influenced strongly by cell substrate interactions. Evidence reaffirming substratum-dependency for several parameters of behaviour in cultured cells was obtained by replacing rigid substrata with a compliant and derivatised polyvinyl alcohol hydrogel where the magnitude of the responses was equivalent.
Keywords :
adhesion; biological techniques; cell motility; cellular biophysics; polymer gels; skin; surface chemistry; cell behaviour; cell migration; cell proliferation; cell substrate interactions; cultured cells; dermal fibroblast; human keratinocytes migration; human skin cell adhesion; microengineered substrata; micropatterned surface chemistry; microtopographic ratchet device; myofibroblast; polyvinyl alcohol hydrogel; solid-phase substrata; Adhesives; Cells (biology); Chemistry; Dermis; Fibroblasts; Gratings; Humans; Skin; Solids; Surface topography;
Conference_Titel :
Microtechnology in Medicine and Biology, 2005. 3rd IEEE/EMBS Special Topic Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8711-2
DOI :
10.1109/MMB.2005.1548423