| Literature DB >> 28841465 |
Francesco Morena1, Ilaria Armentano2, Pia Montanucci3, Chiara Argentati1, Elena Fortunati4, Simona Montesano1, Ilaria Bicchi1, Teresa Pescara3, Ilaria Pennoni3, Samantha Mattioli4, Luigi Torre4, Loredana Latterini5, Carla Emiliani6, Giuseppe Basta3, Riccardo Calafiore3, Josè Maria Kenny4, Sabata Martino7.
Abstract
This work shows that the active interaction between human umbilical cord matrix stem cells and Poly (l-lactide)acid (PLLA) and PLLA/Multi Walled Carbon Nanotubes (MWCNTs) nanocomposite films results in the stem cell assembly as a spheroid conformation and affects the stem cell fate transition. We demonstrated that spheroids directly respond to a tunable surface and the bulk properties (electric, dielectric and thermal) of plain and nanocomposite PLLA films by triggering a mechanotransduction axis. This stepwise process starts from tethering of the cells' focal adhesion proteins to the surface, together with the adherens junctions between cells. Both complexes transmit traction forces to F-Actin stress fibres that link Filamin-A and Myosin-IIA proteins, generating a biological scaffold, with increased stiffening conformation from PLLA to PLLA/MWCNTs, and enable the nucleoskeleton proteins to boost chromatin reprogramming processes. Herein, the opposite expression of NANOG and GATA6 transcription factors, together with other lineage specification related proteins, steer spheroids toward an Epiblast-like or Primitive Endoderm-like lineage commitment, depending on the absence or presence of 1 wt% MWCNTs, respectively. This work represents a pioneering effort to create a stem cell/material interface that can model the stem cell fate transition under growth culture conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterials; NANOG-GATA6; Stem cell reprogramming; Stem cell-biomaterial interface; Tissue engineering; hUCMSCs
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28841465 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2017.08.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479