| Literature DB >> 27877708 |
Noemi Tonna1, Fabio Bianco1, Michela Matteoli2, Cinzia Cagnoli2, Flavia Antonucci3, Amedea Manfredi4, Nicolò Mauro4, Elisabetta Ranucci4, Paolo Ferruti4.
Abstract
This paper reports on a novel application of an amphoteric water-soluble polyamidoamine named AGMA1 bearing 4-butylguanidine pendants. AGMA1 is an amphoteric, prevailingly cationic polyelectrolyte with isoelectric point of about 10. At pH 7.4 it is zwitterionic with an average of 0.55 excess positive charges per unit, notwithstanding it is highly biocompatible. In this work, it was found that AGMA1 surface-adsorbed on cell culturing coverslips exhibits excellent properties as adhesion and proliferation promoter of primary brain cells such as microglia, as well as of hippocampal neurons and astrocytes. Microglia cells cultured on AGMA1-coated coverslips substrate displayed the typical resting, ramified morphology of those cultured on poly-L-lysine and poly-L-ornithine, employed as reference substrates. Mixed cultures of primary astrocytes and neuronal cells grown on AGMA1- and poly-L-lysine coated coverslips were morphologically undistinguishable. On both substrates, neurons differentiated axon and dendrites and eventually established perfectly functional synaptic contacts. Quantitative immunocytochemical staining revealed no difference between AGMA1 and poly-L-lysine. Electrophysiological experiments allowed recording neuron spontaneous activity on AGMA1. In addition, cell cultures on both AGMA1 and PLL displayed comparable excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission, demonstrating that the synaptic contacts formed were fully functional.Entities:
Keywords: adhesion promoters; cell culturing; guanidine-containing polyamidoamine; polyamidoamines; primary brain cells
Year: 2014 PMID: 27877708 PMCID: PMC5090696 DOI: 10.1088/1468-6996/15/4/045007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.Chemical structure of AGMA1 repeating unit and RGD motif.
Figure 2.Representative bright field microscopy images of primary rat microglia grown on PLO, PLL and AGMA1. Scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 3.Representative confocal microscopy pictures of primary mixed coculture neurons-astrocytes grown on AGMA1 (A) and PLL (B). Scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 4.Representative bright field microscopy pictures at different times of primary rat hippocampal neurons grown on AGMA1 and PLL. Scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 5.Representative confocal microscopy pictures of primary hippocampal neurons stained with early marker MAP-2 at 2, 7 and 10 div and with both MAP-2 and synaptic vesicle associated marker VAMP-2 at 10 div. Differential interference contrast (DIC) images at 2 and 7 div. Scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 6.Immunofluorescence staining of 16 div primary hippocampal neurons plated on AGMA1 and PLL with synaptic markers SV2 (red), Bassoon (Bsn, blue) and PSD-95 (green). Quantitative analysis: average size of SV2 (A), Bassoon (B) and PSD-95 (C) puncta. (D) Percentage of area of PSD-95 puncta colocalized with SV2 and Bassoon vs total area of PSD-95 puncta. No significant difference in all parameters is detectable between cultures plated on AGMA1 or PLL. The cartoon illustrates the relative localization of the three markers at the synapse. Scale bar = 25 μm. (E) Representative traces of mEPSCs and mIPSCs recorded from 16 div hippocampal neurons plated on PLL substrate or AGMA1 showing the occurrence of miniature events in both experimental conditions, indicating that neurons cultured on AGMA1 are characterized by spontaneous activity comparable to that of neurons grown on PLL coated medium.