4.6 Article

Atomic Force Microscopy Imaging of Elastin Nanofibers Self-Assembly

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16124313

Keywords

elastin fibrils; atomic force microscopy; nanoscale imaging; self-assembly; nanobiomaterials; tissue engineering

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Elastin is a protein that provides elasticity to organs and can self-assemble into elastic fibers. The self-assembling process of elastin fiber structure was investigated under different experimental parameters, and it was found that altering these parameters can affect the formation of elastin nanostructured mesh.
Elastin is an extracellular matrix protein, providing elasticity to the organs, such as skin, blood vessels, lungs and elastic ligaments, presenting self-assembling ability to form elastic fibers. The elastin protein, as a component of elastin fibers, is one of the major proteins found in connective tissue and is responsible for the elasticity of tissues. It provides resilience to the human body, assembled as a continuous mesh of fibers that require to be deformed repetitively and reversibly. Thus, it is of great importance to investigate the development of the nanostructural surface of elastin-based biomaterials. The purpose of this research was to image the self-assembling process of elastin fiber structure under different experimental parameters such as suspension medium, elastin concentration, temperature of stock suspension and time interval after the preparation of the stock suspension. atomic force microscopy (AFM) was applied in order to investigate how different experimental parameters affected fiber development and morphology. The results demonstrated that through altering a number of experimental parameters, it was possible to affect the self-assembly procedure of elastin fibers from nanofibers and the formation of elastin nanostructured mesh consisting of naturally occurring fibers. Further clarification of the contribution of different parameters on fibril formation will enable the design and control of elastin-based nanobiomaterials with predetermined characteristics.

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