4.5 Article

A computational approach to predicting cell growth on polymeric biomaterials

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A
Volume 73A, Issue 1, Pages 116-124

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.30266

Keywords

computational modeling; cell growth; degradable polymers; rat lung fibroblasts; normal foreskin fibroblasts; cell culture; combinatorial design; tyrosine-derived polyarylates

Funding

  1. NIBIB NIH HHS [R01 EB00286, P41 EB001046] Funding Source: Medline

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A predictive model that can correlate the chemical composition of a biomaterial with the biological response of cells that are in contact with that biomaterial would represent a major advance and would facilitate the rational design of new biomaterials. As a first step toward this goal, we report here on the use of Logical Analysis of Data (LAD) to model the effect of selected polymer properties on the growth of two different cell types, rat lung fibroblasts (RLF, a transformed cell line), and normal foreskin fibroblasts (NFF, nontransformed human cells), on 112 surfaces obtained from a combinatorially designed library of polymers. LAD is a knowledge extraction methodology, based on using combinatorics, optimization, and Boolean logic. LAD was trained on a subset of 62 polymers and was then used to predict cell growth on 50 previously untested polymers. Experimental validation indicated that LAD correctly predicted the high and low cell growth polymers and found optimal ranges for polymer chemical composition, surface chemistry, and bulk properties. Particularly noteworthy is that LAD correctly identified high-performing polymer surfaces, which surpassed commercial tissue culture polystyrene as growth substratum for normal foreskin fibroblasts. Our results establish the feasibility of using computational modeling of cell growth on flat polymeric surfaces to identify promising lead polymers for applications that require either high or low cell growth. (c) 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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