| Literature DB >> 26958602 |
In-Sung Yeo1, Seung-Ki Min2, Hyun Ki Kang3, Taek-Ka Kwon4, Sung Youn Jung3, Byung-Moo Min3.
Abstract
Functional peptides are attractive as novel therapeutic reagents because their amino acid sequences are flexible in adopting and mimicking the local functional features of proteins. These peptides are of low molecular weight, synthetically versatile and inexpensive to produce, suggesting that they can be used as drug targeting, potent, stable and bioavailable agents. A short bioactive peptide is expected to be more beneficial in regenerative medicine than an entire protein because of the lower antigenicity of short amino acid sequences. We detected core peptides from human laminin that are involved in adhesion and spreading, which are the first steps of various cells including osteogenic cells, in becoming functional. In this experiment, we detected adhesion and spreading of osteoblast-like cells seeded on the core peptide-coated surface. These in vitro data are related to the research article, entitled "Identification of a bioactive core sequence from human laminin and its applicability to tissue engineering" (Yeo et al., 2015) [1].Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26958602 PMCID: PMC4773398 DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2015.09.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Data Brief ISSN: 2352-3409
Fig. 1Cell adhesion and spreading of osteoblast-like cells seeded on culture plates treated with laminin, scrambled peptide (SP), Ln2-LG3-P2, and Ln2-LG3-P2-DN3. (A) Photographs of osteoblast-like HOS and MG-63 cells adhering to culture plates treated with 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA), laminin (1.3 μg/cm2), SP, Ln2-LG3-P2, and Ln2-LG3-P2-DN3 (13.2 μg/cm2) for 3 h. Bar=100 μm. (B) and (C) Adhesion (B) and spreading (C) of osteoblast-like HOS and MG-63 cells seeded on plates treated with BSA, laminin, and synthetic peptides for 1 h (B) or 3 h (C). Data are mean±standard deviation (n=4). *p<0.01.
Fig. 2Cell adhesion and spreading of osteoblast-like cells plated on modified Ti surfaces. Scanning electron micrographs (A) and levels of cell adhesion (B) and spreading (C) of osteoblast-like HOS and MG-63 cells plated for 1 h (B) and 3 h (A) and (C) on 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA)-, laminin (1.4 μg/cm2)-, scrambled peptide (SP)-, Ln2-LG3-P2-, and Ln2-LG3-P2-DN3 (14.3 μg/cm2)-treated pure Ti surfaces. Data are mean±standard deviation (n=4). Bars=50 μm. *p<0.01.
| Subject area | Biology |
| More specific subject area | Biomaterial, Biointerface |
| Type of data | Image (light and electron microscopy) and graphic |
| How data were acquired | Absorbance, image analysis software (Image-Pro Plus ver. 4.5; Media Cybernetics, Silver Spring, MD, USA), field-emission scanning electron microscopy (S-4700; Hitachi, Tokyo, Japan) |
| Data format | Analyzed |
| Experimental factors | Human osteosarcoma and MG-63 cells were cultured in Dulbecco׳s modified Eagle׳s medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. The cells were seeded on 24-well culture plates or Ti discs coated with the human laminin-derived core peptide. The cells were incubated at 37 °C for 1 h for the adhesion assay or for 3 h for the spreading assay. |
| Experimental features | Absorbance was measured at 570 nm with a microplate reader for the adhesion assay, and spread cell area was calculated by image analysis for the spreading assay. |
| Data source location | Seoul, Republic of Korea |
| Data accessibility | Within this article |