4.7 Article

Selective axonal growth of embryonic hippocampal neurons according to topographic features of various sizes and shapes

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages 45-57

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S12376

Keywords

axon guidance; micropatterning; polarization; surface topography; tissue engineering

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIH R01EB004429]
  2. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  3. Texas Materials Institute (TMI) at the University of Texas at Austin

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Purpose: Understanding how surface features influence the establishment and outgrowth of the axon of developing neurons at the single cell level may aid in designing implantable scaffolds for the regeneration of damaged nerves. Past studies have shown that micropatterned ridge-groove structures not only instigate axon polarization, alignment, and extension, but are also preferred over smooth surfaces and even neurotrophic ligands. Methods: Here, we performed axonal-outgrowth competition assays using a proprietary four-quadrant topography grid to determine the capacity of various micropatterned topographies to act as stimuli sequestering axon extension. Each topography in the grid consisted of an array of microscale (approximately 2 mu m) or submicroscale (approximately 300 nm) holes or lines with variable dimensions. Individual rat embryonic hippocampal cells were positioned either between two juxtaposing topographies or at the borders of individual topographies juxtaposing unpatterned smooth surface, cultured for 24 hours, and analyzed with respect to axonal selection using conventional imaging techniques. Results: Topography was found to influence axon formation and extension relative to smooth surface, and the distance of neurons relative to topography was found to impact whether the topography could serve as an effective cue. Neurons were also found to prefer submicroscale over microscale features and holes over lines for a given feature size. Conclusion: The results suggest that implementing physical cues of various shapes and sizes on nerve guidance conduits and other advanced biomaterial scaffolds could help stimulate axon regeneration.

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