| Literature DB >> 26670693 |
Seraphine V Wegner1,2, Oya I Sentürk1,2, Joachim P Spatz1,2.
Abstract
Herein, we report the use of a versatile photocleavable nitrobenzyl linker to micropattern a wide variety of bioactive molecules and photorelease them on demand. On one end, the linker has an NHS group that can be coupled with any amine, such as peptides, proteins or amine-linkers, and on the other end an alkyne for convenient attachment to materials with an azide functional group. This linker was conjugated with NTA-amine or the cell adhesion peptide cRGD to enable straightforward patterning of His6-tagged proteins or cells, respectively, on PEGylated glass surfaces. This approach provides a practical way to control the presentation of a wide variety of bioactive molecules with high spatial and temporal resolution. The extent of photocleavage can also be controlled to tune the biomolecule density and degree of cell attachment to the surface.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26670693 PMCID: PMC4680943 DOI: 10.1038/srep18309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1General functionalization strategy.
(a) Bioactive molecules with an amine such as cRGD and NTA-amine can be linked through the NHS moiety and the molecule can be attached to any material with an azide functional group through CuAAC. The nitrobenzene in the linker allows for the photochemical detachment. (b) Surfaces functionalized with bioactive molecules through linker 1 can be pattered by locally cleaving off the molecules with light.
Figure 2Characterization of NTA-NO2.
(a) Working model of NTA-NO2. The His6-tagged POI (protein of interest) binds to the Ni2+-NTA-NO2 complex presented at the surface. Upon illumination the NTA group is cleaved from the surface and the protein is released. (b) His6-GFP binds on SiO2 QCM crystals coated with 10 mol% PEG-azide and modified with NTA-NO2. When the lamp is turned on the His6-GFP is liberated from the surface. (c) Fluorescence image of NTA-NO2 modified surface with circular micropatterns (160 μm) and (d) the line profile along the line. The surface was illuminated under an upright fluorescence microscope with an adjustable field aperture. The surface was incubated afterwards with Ni2+ and His6-GFP for visualization.
Figure 3Characterization of cRGD-NO2.
(a) Working model of cRGD-NO2. Cells can adhere to cRGD-NO2 modified PEG surfaces through integrin binding. Upon illumination the integrin ligand cRGD is cleaved off and cells can no longer adhere on the PEG coating. (b) QCM measurements showing integrin αvβ3 binding to cRGD-NO2 modified 1 mol% PEG-azide surfaces. The bound integrin αvβ3 is washed off as the surface is irradiated (λ = 365 nm). (c) REF cell adhesion on surfaces with 1% PEG-azide coating modified with cRGD-NO2. Surfaces are irradiated with light of λ = 365 nm for 0, 10 and 30 minutes to achieve various extends of cRGD cleavage. Unmodified surfaces with the same PEG coating are used as controls and the number of cells on the surface are given as the percentage of cells that adheres on a cRGD modified surface. The error bars are the standard deviation from three independent experiments. (d) Patterned MDCK cells on cRGD-NO2 modified surfaces. The surface was illuminated under an upright fluorescence microscope with an adjustable field aperture.