| Literature DB >> 30464995 |
Yifan Chen1, Jiahua Ni1, Hongliu Wu1, Ruopeng Zhang1, Changli Zhao1, Wenzhi Chen1, Feiqing Zhang1, Shaoxiang Zhang2, Xiaonong Zhang1,2.
Abstract
It has been revealed that the different morphologies of anodized TiO2 nanotubes, especially nanotube diameters, triggered different cell behaviors. However, the influence of TiO2 nanotubes with coexisting multi-size diameters on cell behaviors is seldom reported. In this work, coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube samples, namely, one single substrate with the integration of four different nanotube diameters (60, 150, 250, and 350 nm), were prepared by repeated anodization. The boundaries between two different diameter regions show well-organized structure without obvious difference in height. The adhesion behaviors of MC3T3-E1 cells on the coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays were investigated. The results exhibit a significant difference of cell density between smaller diameters (60 and 150 nm) and larger diameters (250 and 350 nm) within 24 h incubation with the coexistence of different diameters, which is totally different from that on the single-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays. The coexistence of four different diameters does not change greatly the cell morphologies compared with the single-diameter nanotubes. The findings in this work are expected to offer further understanding of the interaction between cells and materials.Entities:
Keywords: Cell adhesion behaviors; Cell-material interaction; Coexisting multi-size TiO2 nanotubes; MC3T3-E1 cells; Repeated anodization
Year: 2015 PMID: 30464995 PMCID: PMC6223924 DOI: 10.1007/s40820-015-0062-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomicro Lett ISSN: 2150-5551
Fig. 1Schematic diagrams of four-diameter coexisting TiO2 nanotube arrays
Fig. 2SEM surface morphologies of each region of coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays anodized at a 60 V; b 150 V; c 250 V; d 350 V
Fig. 3The boundary morphologies between two different diameters of coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays: a 60 and 150 nm; b 150 and 250 nm, c 60 and 350 nm, d 250 and 350 nm. (All insets show partial enlargement of boundary morphologies)
Fig. 4SEM images of cell morphologies after 6 h of incubation on nanotubes of: a 60 nm; b 150 nm; c 250 nm; d 350 nm (All insets show the filopodia, and the arrows indicate the protrusion of filopodia)
Fig. 5Representative fluorescence images of osteoblasts on each region of coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays after incubation of 2 h: a 60 nm, b 150 nm, c 250 nm, d 350 nm (All insets show the enlargement of representative fluorescence images of osteoblasts)
Fig. 6Heat map of cell density distribution on coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays after incubation of: a 2 h; b 6 h; c 12 h; d 24 h (Red shows the highest cell density; Purple shows the lowest cell density). (Color figure online)
Fig. 7The cell density of each region of coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays after incubation of 2, 6, 12, and 24 h. The bar graphs show the average ± SD. The p values after performing t tests reaching statistical significance (p < 0.05) are marked on the graphs: *Significant difference between the 60-nm-diameter TiO2 nanotubes and the 250- and 350-nm nanotubes; #Significant difference between the 150, 250, and 350 nm in diameters. (Color figure online)
Water contact angle of the surface of each region of coexisting four-diameter TiO2 nanotube arrays
| Regions | Contact angle (°) |
|---|---|
| 60 nm (15 V) | 7 ± 1 |
| 150 nm (40 V) | 4 ± 1 |
| 250 nm (80 V) | 3 ± 1 |
| 350 nm (120 V) | 3 ± 1 |