Title :
A parallel-plate flow chamber to study initial cell adhesion on a nanofeatured surface
Author :
Martines, Elena ; McGhee, Kieran ; Wilkinson, Chris ; Curtis, Adam
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. of Glasgow, UK
fDate :
6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Cells in the human body come across many types of information, which they respond to. Both material chemistry and topography of the surface where they adhere have an effect on cell shape, proliferation, migration, and gene expression. It is possible to create surfaces with topography at the nanometric scale to allow observation of cell-topography interactions. Previous work has shown that 100-nm-diameter pits on a 300-nm pitch can have a marked effect in reducing the adhesion of rat fibroblasts in static cultures. In the present study, a flow of cell suspension was used to investigate cell adhesion onto nanopits in dynamic conditions, by means of a parallel-plate flow chamber. A flow chamber with inner nanotopography has been designed, which allows real-time observation of the flow over the nanopits. A nanopitted pattern was successfully embossed into polymethylmethacrylate to meet the required shape of the chamber. Dynamic cell adhesion after 1 h has been quantified and compared on flat and nanopitted polymethylmethacrylate substrates. The nanopits were seen to be significantly less adhesive than the flat substrates (p<0.001), which is coherent with previous observations of static cultures.
Keywords :
adhesion; cellular transport; channel flow; nanostructured materials; surface topography; suspensions; cell migration; cell proliferation; cell shape; cell suspension; cell-topography interactions; gene expression; initial cell adhesion; material chemistry; nanofeatured surface; nanopitted polymethylmethacrylate substrates; parallel-plate flow chamber; rat fibroblasts; surface topography; Adhesives; Biomedical engineering; Electron beams; Embossing; Gene expression; Lithography; Nanotopography; Shape; Surface morphology; Surface topography; Animals; Biocompatible Materials; Cell Adhesion; Cell Culture Techniques; Cells, Cultured; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Fibroblasts; Flow Cytometry; Materials Testing; Microfluidics; Nanotechnology; Polymethyl Methacrylate; Rats; Surface Properties;
Journal_Title :
NanoBioscience, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNB.2004.828268