4.3 Article

Surface characteristics and fibroblast adhesion behavior off RGD-immobilized biodegradable PLLA films

Journal

MACROMOLECULAR RESEARCH
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 446-452

Publisher

POLYMER SOC KOREA
DOI: 10.1007/BF03218479

Keywords

tissue engineering; PLLA film; plasma treatment; direct AA grafting; RGD immobilization; fibroblast adhesion

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The interactions between the surface of scaffolds and specific cells play an important role in tissue engineering applications. Some cell adhesive ligand peptides including Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) have been grafted into polymeric scaffolds to improve specific cell attachment. In order to make cell adhesive scaffolds for tissue regeneration, biodegradable nonporous poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) films were prepared by using a solvent casting technique with chloroform. The hydrophobic PLLA films were surface-modified by Argon plasma treatment and in situ direct acrylic acid (AA) grafting to get hydrophilic PLLA-g-PAA. The obtained carboxylic groups of PLLA-g-PAA were coupled with the amine groups of Gly-Arg-Asp-Gly (GR (DG) under bar, control) and GRGD as a ligand peptide to get PLLA-g-GR (DG) under bar and PLLA-g-GRGD, respectively. The surface properties of the modified PLLA films were examined by various surface analyses. The surface structures of the PLLA films were confirmed by ATR-FTIR and ESCA, whereas the immobilized amounts of the ligand peptides were 138-145 pmol/cm(2). The PLLA surfaces were more hydrophilic after AA and/or RGD grafting but their surface morphologies showed still relatively smoothness. Fibroblast adhesion to the PLLA surfaces was improved in the order of PLLA control < PLLA-g-PAA=PLLA-g-GR (DG) under bar < PLLA-g-GRGD, indicating that PLLA-g-GRGD has the highest cell adhesive property.

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