Decoupling the Influence of Poly(3,4‐Ethylenedioxythiophene)‐Collagen Composite Characteristics on Cell Stemness

Author:

Keate Rebecca L.123ORCID,Tropp Joshua123ORCID,Wu Ruiheng3ORCID,Petty Anthony J.123ORCID,Ameer Guillermo A.12345ORCID,Rivnay Jonathan12356ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Northwestern University Evanston IL 60208 USA

2. Center for Advanced Regenerative Engineering Northwestern University Evanston IL 60208 USA

3. Simpson Querrey Institute Northwestern University Chicago IL 60611 USA

4. Department of Surgery Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University Chicago IL 60611 USA

5. Chemistry of Life Processes Institute Northwestern University Chicago IL 60208 USA

6. International Institute for Nanotechnology Northwestern University Chicago IL 60208 USA

Abstract

AbstractConductive polymers (CPs) are widely studied for their ability to influence a myriad of tissue systems. While their mixed ionic/electronic conductivity is commonly considered the primary driver of these benefits, the mechanisms by which CPs influence cell fate remain unclear. In this study, CP‐biomaterial interactions are investigated using collagen, due to its widespread prevalence throughout the body and in tissue engineering constructs. Collagen is functionalized with both electrostatically and covalently bound derivatives of the CP poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) doped via backbone‐tethered sulfonate groups, which enable high solubility and loading to the collagen biomatrix. Intrinsically doped scaffolds are compared to those incorporated with a commercially available PEDOT formulation, which is complexed with polyanionic polystyrene sulfonate (PSS). Low loadings of intrinsically doped PEDOT do not increase substrate conductivity compared to collagen alone, enabling separate investigation into CP loading and conductivity. Interestingly, higher PEDOT loading bolsters human mesenchymal stromal (hMSC) cell gene expression of Oct‐4 and NANOG, which are key transcription factors regulating cell stemness. Conductive collagen composites with commercial PEDOT:PSS do not significantly affect the expression of these transcription factors in hMSCs. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that PEDOT regulates cellular fate independently from physical changes to the material but directly to the loading of the polymer.

Funder

Northwestern University

National Science Foundation

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Office of Naval Research Global

Division of Electrical, Communications and Cyber Systems

Publisher

Wiley

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