| Literature DB >> 24956190 |
Juliane Teichmann1, Monika Valtink2, Mirko Nitschke3, Stefan Gramm4, Richard H W Funk5, Katrin Engelmann6, Carsten Werner7.
Abstract
Functional impairment of the human corneal endothelium can lead to corneal blindness. In order to meet the high demand for transplants with an appropriate human corneal endothelial cell density as a prerequisite for corneal function, several tissue engineering techniques have been developed to generate transplantable endothelial cell sheets. These approaches range from the use of natural membranes, biological polymers and biosynthetic material compositions, to completely synthetic materials as matrices for corneal endothelial cell sheet generation. This review gives an overview about currently used materials for the generation of transplantable corneal endothelial cell sheets with a special focus on thermo-responsive polymer coatings.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24956190 PMCID: PMC4030930 DOI: 10.3390/jfb4040178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Figure 1Structure of the human cornea (A) The cornea is composed of three cellular layers: (1) epithelium; (2) stroma; and (3) endothelium; (B) The epithelial layer resides on Bowman’s membrane (*); and (C) the endothelial layer resides on Descemet’s membrane (**).
Figure 2Function of thermo-responsive cell culture carriers based on poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide). (Left) At temperatures above the critical temperature, Tcr, of the polymer system, intramolecular interactions between the single polymer chains are preferred. The polymer system is collapsed and allows for adhesion of cells. (Right) Reduction of the temperature beneath Tcr of the polymer system supports intermolecular interactions via hydrogen bonds between polymer chains and water molecules. The polymer system swells and thermally induced detachment of adherent cells as a sheet occurs. ECM = extracellular matrix; SRP = stimuli-responsive polymer.
Processes to fabricate thermo-responsive coatings.
| Process based on | Polymer/copolymer/blend | Monomer unit(s) |
|---|---|---|
| without additional energy input | grafting to | grafting from |
|
| simultaneous cross-linking and immobilization by
electron irradiation low pressure plasma exposure | simultaneous polymerization and immobilization by
UV irradiation gamma irradiation electron irradiation |
Figure 3Preparation and biomolecular functionalization of a thermo-responsive cell culture carrier (bottom) and a cell attaching to it (top). A glass slide (1) is coated with polystyrene (2). A thin film of (PVME)-blend-PVME maleic anhydride (MA) (PVME-blend-PVMEMA) is prepared on the polystyrene surface by simultaneous electron beam cross-linking and immobilization (3). Anhydride groups allow for covalent attachment of proteins or peptides that contain free amino groups, like cyclic RGD (4). Subsequently, cells can attach to the surface by binding to the peptide with integrin receptors, which leads to the formation of focal adhesions at the intracellular side of the plasma membrane (5). Reprinted from [159] with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 4Selected cases of (a) adhesion; and (b) thermally stimulated detachment of human corneal endothelial cells (HCEC). Cells were cultured for four days on thin PVME-blend-PVMEMA-based carriers with a low content of reactive binding sites for proteins/peptides, a low/high cross-linking degree and biofunctionalization with laminin/chondroitin-6-sulfate (LN/CS) or cyclic RGD (cRGD).