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Polydopamine-mediated surface modification of scaffold materials for human neural stem cell engineering

Authors
 Kisuk Yang  ;  Jung Seung Lee  ;  Jin Kim  ;  Yu Bin Lee  ;  Heungsoo Shin  ;  Soong Ho Um  ;  Jeong Beom Kim  ;  Kook In Park  ;  Haeshin Lee  ;  Seung-Woo Cho 
Citation
 BIOMATERIALS, Vol.33(29) : 6952-6964, 2012 
Journal Title
BIOMATERIALS
ISSN
 0142-9612 
Issue Date
2012
MeSH
Animals ; Biomimetics/methods ; Cell Adhesion ; Cell Differentiation ; Coated Materials, Biocompatible/chemistry* ; Collagen/chemistry ; Drug Combinations ; Humans ; Immunohistochemistry/methods ; Indoles/chemistry* ; Laminin/chemistry ; Mice ; Models, Chemical ; Neural Stem Cells/cytology* ; Neurons/cytology ; Peptides/chemistry ; Polymers/chemistry* ; Proteoglycans/chemistry ; Surface Properties ; Tissue Engineering/methods* ; Tissue Scaffolds/chemistry*
Keywords
Polydopamine ; Surface immobilization ; Neural stem cell ; Neurotrophic growth factor ; Adhesion peptide
Abstract
Surface modification of tissue engineering scaffolds and substrates is required for improving the efficacy of stem cell therapy by generating physicochemical stimulation promoting proliferation and differentiation of stem cells. However, typical surface modification methods including chemical conjugation or physical absorption have several limitations such as multistep, complicated procedures, surface denaturation, batch-to-batch inconsistencies, and low surface conjugation efficiency. In this study, we report a mussel-inspired, biomimetic approach to surface modification for efficient and reliable manipulation of human neural stem cell (NSC) differentiation and proliferation. Our study demonstrates that polydopamine coating facilitates highly efficient, simple immobilization of neurotrophic growth factors and adhesion peptides onto polymer substrates. The growth factor or peptide-immobilized substrates greatly enhance differentiation and proliferation of human NSCs (human fetal brain-derived NSCs and human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived NSCs) at a level comparable or greater than currently available animal-derived coating materials (Matrigel) with safety issues. Therefore, polydopamine-mediated surface modification can provide a versatile platform technology for developing chemically defined, safe, functional substrates and scaffolds for therapeutic applications of human NSCs.
Full Text
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014296121200717X
DOI
22809643
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pediatrics (소아과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Park, Kook In(박국인) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8499-9293
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/89743
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