| Literature DB >> 35687044 |
Pravin Hivare1, Ankit Gangrade1, Gitanjali Swarup1, Krishna Bhavsar1, Ankur Singh1, Ratnika Gupta2, Prachi Thareja2, Sharad Gupta1,3, Dhiraj Bhatia1,3.
Abstract
Designing programmable biomaterials that could act as extracellular matrices and permit functionalization is a current need for tissue engineering advancement. DNA based hydrogels are gaining significant attention owing to their self-assembling properties, biocompatibility, chemical robustness and low batch to batch variability. The real potential of DNA hydrogels in the biomedical domain remains to be explored. In this work, a DNA hydrogel was coated on a glass surface and coupled to a synthetic IKVAV peptide by a chemical crosslinker. We observe enhanced neuronal differentiation, prolonged neurite length, dynamic movement of microtubules and cytoskeleton, and altered endocytic mechanisms in neuroblastoma-based stem cells for the peptide modified DNA hydrogel compared to the unmodified DNA hydrogel and controls. We anticipate that a peptide-modified DNA hydrogel could emerge as a promising scaffold coating material to develop nerve tissue conduits in the future for application in neuroscience and neuroregeneration.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35687044 DOI: 10.1039/d1nr07187d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790