| Literature DB >> 26758892 |
Jun Kit Wang1,2,3, Gordon Minru Xiong3, Baiwen Luo3, Chee Chong Choo4, Shaojun Yuan5, Nguan Soon Tan4,6,7, Cleo Choong8,9.
Abstract
Although polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) is non-toxic and stable in vivo, its hydrophobic surface has limited its bio-applications due to poor cell-material interaction and thrombus formation when used in blood contacting devices. In this study, surface modification of PVDF using naturally derived non-mammalian collagen was accomplished via direct surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerisation (SI-ATRP) to enhance its cytocompatibility and hemocompatibility. Results showed that Type I collagen was successfully extracted from fish scales and bullfrog skin. The covalent immobilisation of fish scale-derived collagen (FSCOL) and bullfrog skin-derived collagen (BFCOL) onto the PVDF surface improves the attachment and proliferation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Furthermore, both FSCOL and BFCOL had comparable anti-thrombogenic profiles to that of commercially available bovine collagen (BVCOL). Also, cell surface expression of the leukocyte adhesion molecule was lower on HUVECs cultured on non-mammalian collagen surfaces than on BVCOL, which is an indication of lower pro-inflammatory response. Overall, results from this study demonstrated that non-mammalian sources of collagen could be used to confer bioactivity to PVDF, with comparable cell-material interactions and hemocompatibility to BVCOL. Additionally, higher expression levels of Type IV collagen in HUVECs cultured on FSCOL and BFCOL were observed as compared to BVCOL, which is an indication that the non-mammalian sources of collagen led to a better pro-angiogenic properties, thus making them suitable for blood contacting applications.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26758892 PMCID: PMC4710638 DOI: 10.1007/s10856-015-5651-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med ISSN: 0957-4530 Impact factor: 3.896
Scheme 1Reaction path used for surface grafting of collagen from PVDF by direct SI-ATRP
Sequences of primers for quantitative qPCR
| Transcripts | Primer sequence (5′ to 3′) |
|---|---|
| vWF | S: CACCATTCAGCTAAGAGGAGG |
| A: GCCCTGGCAGTAGTGGATA | |
| PAI-1 | S: TTGGTGAAGGGTCTGCTGTG |
| A: GGCTCCTTTCCCAAGCAAGT | |
| tPA | S: ATGGGAAGACATGAATGCAC |
| A: GAAAGGGGAAGGAGACTTGA | |
| eNOS | S: AGCTGTGCTGGCATACAGGA |
| A: ATGGTAACATCGCCGCAGAC | |
| Collagen IV | S: CCTGGCTTGAAAGGTGATAAG |
| A: CCCGCTATCCCTTGATCTC | |
| GAPDH | S: CCCCTTCATTGACCTCAACTACA |
| A: TTGCTGATGATCTTGAGGCTGT |
Fig. 1Extraction of collagen from food processing waste material in the form of a Snakehead scales and b Bullfrog skin. The SEM images show the presence of collagen fibres of different thicknesses and orientation. (Inset: Scale bar = 50 µm)
Fig. 2Characterisation of collagen showing a ATR-FTIR spectra of the characteristic amide peaks of collagen (Dotted lines) and b SDS-PAGE analysis showing the protein expression levels of Type I collagen. (1) FSCOL, (2) BFCOL, (3) BVCOL and (4) protein ladder as marker
Amino acid composition of FSCOL and BFCOL with BVCOL as reference
| Types of amino acid | FSCOL (residues/1000) | BFCOL (residues/1000) | BVCOL (residues/1000) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aspartic acid | 41.40 | 49.29 | 48.45 |
| Threonine | 26.01 | 20.88 | 18.41 |
| Serine | 36.77 | 50.10 | 33.93 |
| Glutamic acid | 70.48 | 74.94 | 74.00 |
| Glycine | 383.70 | 393.94 | 367.72 |
| Alanine | 134.42 | 122.21 | 122.17 |
| Valine | 18.04 | 11.85 | 19.30 |
| Methionine | 5.11 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Isoleucine | 10.35 | 8.45 | 12.02 |
| Leucine | 20.41 | 20.90 | 30.68 |
| Phenylalanine | 11.36 | 10.70 | 12.12 |
| Lysine | 24.69 | 28.24 | 23.43 |
| Histidine | 7.10 | 6.43 | 5.20 |
| Arginine | 49.10 | 55.86 | 54.28 |
| Proline | 130.65 | 146.19 | 136.59 |
Fig. 3ATR-FTIR results after a Conjugation of pHEMA chains onto PVDF films followed by tethering of CDI biolinker onto the surface functionalised PVDF films and b Immobilisation of different sources of collagen onto the functionalised PVDF films. (Dotted lines Characteristic peaks for PVDF substrate; Solid lines Characteristic peaks resulted after each functionalisation ATRP step)
Fig. 4Cell proliferation results for the different ATRP-treated PVDF films using a PrestoBlue® assay (*P < 0.05) and b FDA-stained viable HUVECs (green fluorescence) on Day 7 (Color figure online)
Fig. 5Relative mRNA expression of indicated genes as determined by qPCR when HUVECs were cultured on the different collagen-enriched substrates (*P < 0.05)
Fig. 6Expression of P-selectin (CD62P) on activated platelets plated on different endothelialised collagen substrates (*P < 0.05)
Fig. 7Representative FACS analysis of HUVECs expressing a ICAM-1 expression and b VCAM-1 expression, when cultured on different endothelialised collagen surfaces (Solid line FSCOL; Dashed line BFCOL and Dotted line BVCOL)