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Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization

[Image: see text] We present a novel technique to examine cell–cell interactions and directed cell migration using micropatterned substrates of three distinct regions: an adhesive region, a nonadhesive region, and a dynamically adhesive region switched by addition of a soluble factor to the medium....

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Autores principales: Rodriguez, Natalia M., Desai, Ravi A., Trappmann, Britta, Baker, Brendon M., Chen, Christopher S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3983373/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24401172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404037s
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author Rodriguez, Natalia M.
Desai, Ravi A.
Trappmann, Britta
Baker, Brendon M.
Chen, Christopher S.
author_facet Rodriguez, Natalia M.
Desai, Ravi A.
Trappmann, Britta
Baker, Brendon M.
Chen, Christopher S.
author_sort Rodriguez, Natalia M.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] We present a novel technique to examine cell–cell interactions and directed cell migration using micropatterned substrates of three distinct regions: an adhesive region, a nonadhesive region, and a dynamically adhesive region switched by addition of a soluble factor to the medium. Combining microcontact printing with avidin–biotin capture chemistry, we pattern nonadhesive regions of avidin that become adhesive through the capture of biotinylated fibronectin. Our strategy overcomes several limitations of current two-color dynamically adhesive substrates by incorporating a third, permanently nonadhesive region. Having three spatially and functionally distinct regions allows for the realization of more complex configurations of cellular cocultures as well as intricate interface geometries between two cell populations for diverse heterotypic cell–cell interaction studies. We can now achieve spatial control over the path and direction of migration in addition to temporal control of the onset of migration, enabling studies that better recapitulate coordinated multicellular migration and organization in vitro. We confirm that cellular behavior is unaltered on captured biotinylated fibronectin as compared to printed fibronectin by examining the cells’ ability to spread, form adhesions, and migrate. We demonstrate the versatility of this approach in studies of migration and cellular cocultures, and further highlight its utility by probing Notch–Delta juxtacrine signaling at a patterned interface.
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spelling pubmed-39833732015-01-08 Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization Rodriguez, Natalia M. Desai, Ravi A. Trappmann, Britta Baker, Brendon M. Chen, Christopher S. Langmuir [Image: see text] We present a novel technique to examine cell–cell interactions and directed cell migration using micropatterned substrates of three distinct regions: an adhesive region, a nonadhesive region, and a dynamically adhesive region switched by addition of a soluble factor to the medium. Combining microcontact printing with avidin–biotin capture chemistry, we pattern nonadhesive regions of avidin that become adhesive through the capture of biotinylated fibronectin. Our strategy overcomes several limitations of current two-color dynamically adhesive substrates by incorporating a third, permanently nonadhesive region. Having three spatially and functionally distinct regions allows for the realization of more complex configurations of cellular cocultures as well as intricate interface geometries between two cell populations for diverse heterotypic cell–cell interaction studies. We can now achieve spatial control over the path and direction of migration in addition to temporal control of the onset of migration, enabling studies that better recapitulate coordinated multicellular migration and organization in vitro. We confirm that cellular behavior is unaltered on captured biotinylated fibronectin as compared to printed fibronectin by examining the cells’ ability to spread, form adhesions, and migrate. We demonstrate the versatility of this approach in studies of migration and cellular cocultures, and further highlight its utility by probing Notch–Delta juxtacrine signaling at a patterned interface. American Chemical Society 2014-01-08 2014-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3983373/ /pubmed/24401172 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404037s Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
spellingShingle Rodriguez, Natalia M.
Desai, Ravi A.
Trappmann, Britta
Baker, Brendon M.
Chen, Christopher S.
Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title_full Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title_fullStr Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title_full_unstemmed Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title_short Micropatterned Multicolor Dynamically Adhesive Substrates to Control Cell Adhesion and Multicellular Organization
title_sort micropatterned multicolor dynamically adhesive substrates to control cell adhesion and multicellular organization
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3983373/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24401172
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la404037s
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