4.5 Article

Epithelial contact guidance on well-defined micro- and nanostructured substrates

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 116, Issue 10, Pages 1881-1892

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.00383

Keywords

cell-substrate interactions; substrate topography; grooves and ridges; contact guidance; focal adhesions; nanobiology

Categories

Funding

  1. NEI NIH HHS [R01 EY 012253-01, R01 EY012253] Funding Source: Medline

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The human corneal basement membrane has a rich felt-like surface topography with feature dimensions between 20 nm and 200 nm. On the basis of these findings, we designed lithographically defined substrates to investigate whether nanotopography is a relevant stimulus for human corneal epithelial cells. We found that cells elongated and aligned along patterns of grooves and ridges with feature dimensions as small as 70 nm, whereas on smooth substrates, cells were mostly round. The percentage of aligned cells was constant on substrate tomographies with lateral dimensions ranging from the nano- to the micronscale, and increased with groove depth. The presence of serum in the culture medium resulted in a larger percentage of cells aligning along the topographic patterns than when no serum was added to the basal medium. When present, actin microfilaments and focal adhesions were aligned along the substrate topographies. The width of the focal adhesions was determined by the width of the ridges in the underlying substrate. This work documents that biologic length-scale topographic features that model features encountered in the native basement membrane can profoundly affect epithelial cell behavior.

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