| Literature DB >> 26029688 |
Jacobo Hernández-Montelongo1, Alvaro Muñoz-Noval2, Josefa Predestinación García-Ruíz3, Vicente Torres-Costa4, Raul J Martín-Palma5, Miguel Manso-Silván6.
Abstract
For over 20 years, nanostructured porous silicon (nanoPS) has found a vast number of applications in the broad fields of photonics and optoelectronics, triggered by the discovery of its photoluminescent behavior in 1990. Besides, its biocompatibility, biodegradability, and bioresorbability make porous silicon (PSi) an appealing biomaterial. These properties are largely a consequence of its particular susceptibility to oxidation, leading to the formation of silicon oxide, which is readily dissolved by body fluids. This paper reviews the evolution of the applications of PSi and nanoPS from photonics through biophotonics, to their use as cell scaffolds, whether as an implantable substitute biomaterial, mainly for bony and ophthalmological tissues, or as an in vitro cell conditioning support, especially for pluripotent cells. For any of these applications, PSi/nanoPS can be used directly after synthesis from Si wafers, upon appropriate surface modification processes, or as a composite biomaterial. Unedited studies of fluorescently active PSi structures for cell culture are brought to evidence the margin for new developments.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterial; cell culture; cell scaffold; nanostructure; optical properties; photonics; porous silicon; review
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029688 PMCID: PMC4426817 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2015.00060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1(A) Schematic view of the typical distribution of PSi components, (B) a cross-sectional FESEM image of a characteristic nanoPS layer, and (C) a HRTEM image of nanoPS [(C) is reprinted from Martín-Palma et al. (2002)].
Figure 2Image of various PSi samples prepared at different synthesis conditions.
Figure 3Scheme of the electrochemical cell used for PSi formation.
Figure 4Model of silicon dissolution/PSi formation.
Main effects of the synthesis parameters on PSi formation.
| An increase of … yields a | Porosity | Etching rate | Critical current |
|---|---|---|---|
| HF concentration | Decreasing | Decreasing | Decreasing |
| Current density | Increasing | Increasing | – |
| Anodization time | Increasing | Almost constant | – |
| Temperature | – | – | Increasing |
| Wafer doping (p-type) | Decreasing | Increasing | Increasing |
| Wafer doping (n-type) | Increasing | Increasing | – |
Reprinted from Bisi et al. (.
Figure 5Field emission scanning electron microscopy images of columnar PSi. (A) nanostructured (thickness ~10 μm and pore diameter ~30 nm), and (B) microstructured (thickness ~20 μm and pore diameter ~1 μm).
Figure 6Schematic representation of nanoPS-based hybrid luminescent/magnetic nanostructured particles (hlmNPs) after conjugation. These comprise a nanoPS shell (striped particles) with a multicore of Co nanoparticles (solid blue particles). The hlmNPs have subsequently been conjugated with poly(ethylene glycol).
Cell culture on different kinds of PSi scaffolds.
| PSi scaffold | Cell culture | Cellular key results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nanostructured and exposed to SBF | B50 neuron and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) | CHO were adhered on high- and low-porosity PSi, no cells were found on crystalline Si. B50 cells preferred the PSi surface than poly- and bulk-silicon | Bayliss et al. ( |
| Nanostructured | B50 neuron and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) | PSi offered significant advantages over bulk Si surfaces for cell adherence and viability | Bayliss et al. ( |
| Oxidized by ozone | Primary rat hepatocyte | Cells were available to attach, spread, and function on PSi. | Chin et al. ( |
| Thermally oxidized, carbon layer coated, hexametyldisilazaned, and Si–C deposited by hexametildisilane | Human retinal endothelial cells, mouse aortic endothelial cells, murine melanomas, neuronal mouse cells (B50), hamster ovarian cells (CHO) | All PSi substrates were appropriated for cultivating adherent cells | Angelescu et al. ( |
| Composited with polycaprolactone and exposed to SBF | Human kidney fibroplast cells | Scaffolds were non-toxic to cells and sustained the | Coffer et al. ( |
| Functionalized with | Neuroblastoma cells | Cells growth closely mimicked the laser written micropatterns | Khung et al. ( |
| Patterned by stain etching | Rat hippocampal neuron (B50) | Cells preference adhered to PSi patterns than crystalline and polycrystalline Si. PSi surface topology influenced on proliferation of the neuron network | Sapelkin et al. ( |
| Modified by ozone oxidation, amino and polyethylene silanizated, and coated with collagen | Rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) and human lens epithelial | Scaffolds with collagen coating and amino salinization promoted cell attachment for both cell lines. Cells attached poorly to ozone oxidized and polyethylene glycol salinized PSi surfaces | Low et al. ( |
| Nano-, meso-, and macro-structured | Osteoblast cells | MacroPSi performed better than mesoPSi and nanoPSi in supporting osteoblast growth and sustaining their function | Sun et al. ( |
| Structured with pore size continuous gradient | Neuroblastomas | Cells displayed morphological characteristics, which were influenced by the pore size of PSi. Cells were sensitive to nanoscale surface topography with feature sizes of 20 nm | Khung et al. ( |
| Thermally oxidized and aminosilanized | Human lens epithelial cells | Both PSi scaffolds supported the attachment and growth of human ocular cells, which were able to survive and migrate into ocular tissue spaces | Low et al. ( |
| Oxidized by air, H2O, and medium containing 10% fetal calf serum | Osteoblast cells | PSi surface reduced cell adhesion, but suitable modification using fetal calf serum increased cell adhesion | Yangyang et al. ( |
| Microparticles thermally oxidized and non-treated | Human lens epithelial cells | Non-treated PSi produced reactive oxygen species, which interacted with the components of the cell culture medium, leading to the formation of cytotoxic species. Oxidation of PSi not only mitigated, but also abolished the toxic effects | Low et al. ( |
| Encapsulated in microfibers of polycaprolactone | Human lens epithelial cells | The composite was a flexible and controlled degradable scaffold, which actively supported cells attachment. Samples beneath the conjunctiva of rat eyes without visible infection and erosion of the ocular surface | Kashanian et al. ( |
| Chemically micro-patterned by photolithography and surface silanization | Mammalian neuronal cell line | 98% Total of cell attachment was on the patterned regions | Sweetman et al. ( |
| Surface modified with peptides gradients | Rat mesenchymal stem cells | Cells attachment on PSi surface increased with increasing peptides density | Clements et al. ( |
| Chemically modified by cathodic bias and coated with nano-hydroxyapatite colloid suspension | Murine macrophage cells | Modified PSi surfaces were shown to be better than unmodified PSi to be used as a support for cell culture | Sánchez et al. ( |
| Dry-etched using XeF2 | Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells | PSi scaffold obtained by this novel technique was available to support the replication of cells for up to 21 days in culture | Hajj-Hassan et al. ( |
| Mesoporous structured (5 and 20 nm pore size) and thermal oxidized | Primary human endothelial, mouse mesenchymal normal, mouse neuroblastoma, and human cortical neuron cell line | Surface density of the adhering cells was larger on 5 nm pore size PSi than on 20 nm pore size PSi substrates, depending on the cell type | Gentile et al. ( |
| 1D nanostructured PSi micropatterns | Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) | hMSCs cultured on designed PSi-stripes exhibited a clear polarization with respect to patterns | Muñoz et al. ( |
| 1D and 2D nanostructured PSi micropatterns | Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) | hMSCs were sensitive to 1D and 2D PSi patterns and their migration could be controlled by the particular surface topography and chemistry of scaffolds | Torres-Costa et al. ( |
| Hexagonal geometric micro-patterned | Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) | hMSCs adapted their morphology and cytoskeleton proteins from cell–cell dominant interactions at the center of the hexagonal patterns | Ynsa et al. ( |
| Composited with calcium phosphates (CaP) deposited by cyclic spin coating and cyclic electrochemical activation | Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) | The morphology appearance, active mitosis, and density of adhered cells depended on the morphology and CaP phase of composite obtained by each synthesis technique | Hernandez-Montelongo et al. ( |
| Nano-, meso-, and macro-structured modified by thermal oxidation, silanization with aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTES), and hydrosilylation with undecenoic acid or semicarbazide | Dental pulp stem cells (DPSC) | PSi with 36 nm pore size showed the best adhesion and the fastest growth rate for DPSC compared to PSi comporting smaller pore size (10 nm) or larger pore size (1 μm), especially after silanization with APTES | Sun et al. ( |
| Composited with polycaprolactone and PSi microparticles, exposed to SBF | Osteoblast cells | The addition of increasing quantities of PSi to the composite resulted in proportional increases in cell proliferation | Henstock et al. ( |
Figure 7Neuroblastoma cells growth on the graded PSi observed in SEM after 24 h-incubation time. (A) SEM of neuroblastoma cells on the 1000–3000 nm region, arrow depicting the flattening of the lamellipodia serving as anchorage points. (B) The 300–1000 nm region, arrows highlighting the flattening of the lamellipodia closer to the main cell body. (C) The 100–300 nm region, shorter filopodia-like protrusions between 2 and 4 μm as indicated by the arrows while the arrowhead shows the lamellipodia. (D) Spherical neuroblastoma cells adhering on the 50–100 nm pore size region with relatively short and thick filopodia at the base. (E) The 20–50 nm region, initial recovery of the formation of neuritic processes as indicated by the arrow. (F) The 5–20 nm region, processes were long, spanning up to 40 μm from the cell body with significant outgrowth of filopodia as denoted by the arrows. Reprinted from Khung et al. (2008).
Figure 8(A) Transmission FTIR spectra of PSi and thermally oxidized PSi. (B) Detection of residual oxygen species with PSi particles in 24 h-incubation of human lens epithelial cells on a non-treated PSi, and on a thermally oxidized PSi. Results are expressed as mean fluorescence units at 100 s integration time point. Fluorescence intensity is significantly higher for PSi particles in comparison to thermally oxidized PSi particles and to the no particles samples. (C) Twenty-four hours incubation of human lens epithelial cells on a non-treated porous silicon membrane, and (D) on a thermally oxidized porous silicon membrane. Reprinted from Low et al. (2010).
Figure 9(A) PSi chemical modification by a four-step functionalization cascade. Step 1: electrografting of EBH, Step 2: backfilling with MI, Step 3: ester cleavage in boiling H2SO4, and Step 4: cRGD immobilization. (B) Rat MSC response to cRGD gradient on PSi, with the cRGD density decreasing from left to right. Reprinted from Clements et al. (2011).
Figure 10SEM images of (A) PSi–HAP scaffold (cross-sectional view), and (B) murine macrophages on PSi–HAP scaffold. Reprinted from Sánchez et al. (2011).
Figure 11(A) 5% PSi–PCL composite fibers soaked in SBF for 3 weeks. The fiber surface was deposited with calcium phosphate nanocrystals upon SBF exposure. (B) EDX analysis confirms the composition of the nanoparticles are calcium and phosphorous. Reprinted from Fan et al. (2011).
Figure 12The activity of human osteoblasts on the surface of PCL, PSi–PCL composites, and thermanox coverslips (a tissue culture plastic) was compared. (A) After 28 days, the DNA content of lysates from cells cultured on composites was lower than Thermanox controls, but proportional to the amount of PSi in the composite (gradient: 182 ng DNA/mg PSi). (B) The production of collagen by osteoblasts was again highest on Thermanox, and lowest on the PCL-only disk; increasing PSi content in the composite resulted in an increased rate of collagen production. (C) After 28 days, the amount of collagen produced on composites containing 3 or 4.5% pSi was significantly higher than PCL-only and equivalent to the amount produced on Thermanox. Error bars show SEM, n = 6 (composites), n = 12 (Thermanox) (***P = 0.001). Reprinted from Henstock et al. (2014).
Figure 13Perspective SEM images from a cross section performed in micropatterns showing: (A) alternating Si and PSi stripes, and (B) Si/PSi square grids. (C) Fluorescence microscopy images of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) on 100 μm Si/25 μm nanoPS square micropatterns. Actin is stained green and nuclei are stained blue. (D) Detailed image at an intersection, and (E) histogram of hMSC population from image (C) with absolute % and area normalized population (left and right columns, respectively). “Si” refers to silicon areas, “NPSi-s” to PSi stripes, and “NPSi-c” to PSi “crossways.” Reprinted from Torres-Costa et al. (2012).
Figure 14Fluorescence microscopy image (red + blue channels) of (A) a crossing stripe micro-patterned PSi exposed to phosphate buffered saline for 4 h to show the differentiated aging caused by the porosity gradients, and (B) hMSCs cultured for 24 h on a PSi stripe micropattern showing colocalized red intensity with the presence of the cells (identified by nuclear DAPI staining).