| Literature DB >> 33529926 |
Rongrong Guo1, Jian Li2, Chuntao Chen3, Miao Xiao4, Menghui Liao5, Yangnan Hu5, Yun Liu5, Dan Li6, Jun Zou7, Dongping Sun3, Vincent Torre8, Qi Zhang9, Renjie Chai10, Mingliang Tang11.
Abstract
Neural stem cell (NSC)-based therapy is a promising candidate for treating neurodegenerative diseases and the preclinical researches call an urgent need for regulating the growth and differentiation of such cells. The recognition that three-dimensional culture has the potential to be a biologically significant system has stimulated an extraordinary impetus for scientific researches in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Here, A novel scaffold for culturing NSCs, three-dimensional bacterial cellulose-graphene foam (3D-BC/G), which was prepared via in situ bacterial cellulose interfacial polymerization on the skeleton surface of porous graphene foam has been reported. 3D-BC/G not only supports NSC growth and adhesion, but also maintains NSC stemness and enhances their proliferative capacity. Further phenotypic analysis indicated that 3D-BC/G induces NSCs to selectively differentiate into neurons, forming a neural network in a short amount of time. The scaffold has good biocompatibility with primary cortical neurons enhancing the neuronal network activities. To explore the underlying mechanisms, RNA-Seq analysis to identify genes and signaling pathways was performed and it suggests that 3D-BC/G offers a more promising three-dimensional conductive substrate for NSC research and neural tissue engineering, and the repertoire of gene expression serves as a basis for further studies to better understand NSC biology.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial cellulose; Differentiation; Graphene; Neural stem cell; Three-dimensional culture
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33529926 DOI: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2021.111590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces ISSN: 0927-7765 Impact factor: 5.268