4.5 Article

Adhesive protein interactions with chitosan: Consequences for valve endothelial cell growth on tissue-engineering materials

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A
Volume 67A, Issue 2, Pages 538-547

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/jbm.a.10095

Keywords

chitosan; valve endothelial cell; tissue-engineering; protein adsorption; cell adhesion and growth

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Stable endothelialization of a tissue-engineered heart valve is essential for proper valve function, although adhesive characteristics of the native valve endothelial cell (VEC) have rarely been explored. This research evaluated VEC adhesive qualities and attempted to enhance VEC growth on the biopolymer chitosan, a novel tissue-engineering scaffold material with promising biological and chemical properties. Aortic VEC cultures were isolated and found to preferentially adhere to fibronectin, collagen types IV and I over laminin and osteopontin in a dose-dependent manner. Seeding of VEC onto comparison substrates revealed VEC growth and morphology to be preferential in the order: tissue culture polystyrene > gelatin, poly(DL-lactide-co-glycolide), chitosan > poly(hydroxy alkanoate). Adhesive protein precoating of chitosan did not significantly enhance VEC growth, despite equivalent protein adsorption as to polystyrene. Initial cell adhesion to protein-precoated chitosan, however, was higher than for polystyrene. Composite chitosan/collagen type IV films were investigated as an alternative to simple protein precoatings, and were shown to improve VEC growth and morphology over chitosan alone. These findings suggest potential manipulation of chitosan properties to improve amenability to valve tissue-engineering applications. (C) 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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