4.8 Article

Effects of Nanoscale Spatial Arrangement of Arginine-Glycine-Aspartate Peptides on Dedifferentiation of Chondrocytes

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 7755-7765

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04043

Keywords

RGD nanospacing; micro/nanopattern; poly(ethylene glycol) hydrogel; cell spreading; cell dedifferentiation; chondrocyte

Funding

  1. NSF of China [51533002, 51273046]
  2. Science and Technology Developing Foundation of Shanghai [13XD1401000]

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Cell dedifferentiation is of much importance in many cases such as the classic problem of dedifferentiation of chondrocytes during in vitro culture in cartilage tissue engineering. While cell differentiation has been much investigated, studies of cell dedifferentiation are limited, and the nanocues of cell dedifferentiation have little been reported. Herein, we prepared nanopatterns and micro/nanopatterns of cell-adhesive arginine glycine aspartate (RGD) peptides on nonfouling poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) hydrogels to examine the effects of RGD nanospacing on adhesion and dedifferentiation of chondrocytes. The relatively larger RGD nanospacing above 70 nm was found to enhance the maintainence of the chondrocyte phenotype in two-dimensional culture, albeit not beneficial for adhesion of chondrocytes. A unique micro/nanopattern was employed to decouple cell spreading, cell shape, and cell cell contact from RGD nanospacing. Under given spreading size and shape of single cells, the large RGD nanospacing was still in favor of preserving the normal phenotype of chondrocytes. Hence, the nanoscale spatial arrangement of cell-adhesive ligands affords a new independent regulator of cell dedifferentiation, which should be taken into consideration in biomaterial design for regenerative medicine.

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