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  2. Sequential Photoactivation of Self-Assembled Monolayers to Direct Cell Adhesion and Migration

Sequential Photoactivation of Self-Assembled Monolayers to Direct Cell Adhesion and Migration

  • Langmuir. 2019 Apr 30;35(17):5937-5943. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b04203.
Pradeep Bugga 1 Milan Mrksich 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemistry, Department of Biomedical Engineering, and Department of Cell and Molecular Biology , Northwestern University , Evanston , Illinois 60208 , United States.
Abstract

Dynamic substrates for Cell Culture control the spatial and temporal presentation of extracellular matrix ligands that interact with adherent cells. This paper reports a photoactive surface chemistry that can repeatedly activate regions of the substrate for cell adhesion, spreading, and migration. The approach uses self-assembled monolayers presenting the Integrin ligand RGD that is caged with a nitrophenyl-based photoprotecting group. The group is also modified with a maltoheptaose oligosaccharide to prevent nonspecific protein adsorption and cell attachment. The peptide is uncaged when irradiated with a laser source at 405 nm on a microscope to reveal micron-size regions for single cell attachment. This method is applied to studies of gap junction-mediated communication between two neighboring cells and requires the patterning of an initial receiver cell population and then the patterning of a second sender population to give a culture wherein each pair of cells are separated by 30 μm. Finally, activation of the region between the cells permits cell-cell contact and gap junction assembly between the sender and receiver cells. This example demonstrates the broad relevance of this method to studying complex phenotypes in Cell Culture.

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