A Protein‐Adsorbent Hydrogel with Tunable Stiffness for Tissue Culture Demonstrates Matrix‐Dependent Stiffness Responses

Author:

Li Linqing123,Griebel Megan E.1,Uroz Marina12,Bubli Saniya Yesmin3,Gagnon Keith A.1,Trappmann Britta4,Baker Brendon M.5,Eyckmans Jeroen12,Chen Christopher S.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Biological Design Center Boston University Boston MA 02215 USA

2. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering Harvard University Boston MA 02115 USA

3. Department of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering University of New Hampshire Durham NH 03824 USA

4. Bioactive Materials Laboratory Max Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine Röntgenstraße 20 48149 Münster Germany

5. Engineered Microenvironments and Mechanobiology Lab Department of Biomedical Engineering University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI 48109 USA

Abstract

AbstractAlthough tissue culture plastic has been widely employed for cell culture, the rigidity of plastic is not physiologic. Softer hydrogels used to culture cells have not been widely adopted in part because coupling chemistries are required to covalently capture extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins and support cell adhesion. To create an in vitro system with tunable stiffnesses that readily adsorbs ECM proteins for cell culture, a novel hydrophobic hydrogel system is presented via chemically converting hydroxyl residues on the dextran backbone to methacrylate groups, thereby transforming non‐protein adhesive, hydrophilic dextran to highly protein adsorbent substrates. Increasing methacrylate functionality increases the hydrophobicity in the resulting hydrogels and enhances ECM protein adsorption without additional chemical reactions. These hydrophobic hydrogels permit facile and tunable modulation of substrate stiffness independent of hydrophobicity or ECM coatings. Using this approach, it is shown that substrate stiffness and ECM adsorption work together to affect cell morphology and proliferation, but the strengths of these effects vary in different cell types. Furthermore, it is revealed that stiffness‐mediated differentiation of dermal fibroblasts into myofibroblasts is modulated by the substrate ECM. The material system demonstrates remarkable simplicity and flexibility to tune ECM coatings and substrate stiffness and study their effects on cell function.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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