Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Sub-Micropillar Spacing Modulates the Spatial Arrangement of Mouse MC3T3-E1 Osteoblastic Cells

2019; Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Volume: 9; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3390/nano9121701

ISSN

2079-4991

Autores

Benedetta Ghezzi, Paola Lagonegro, Naoki Fukata, Ludovica Parisi, Davide Calestani, Carlo Galli, G. Salviati, Guido Maria Macaluso, Francesca Rossi,

Tópico(s)

Bone Tissue Engineering Materials

Resumo

Surface topography is one of the main factors controlling cell responses on implanted devices and a proper definition of the characteristics that optimize cell behavior may be crucial to improve the clinical performances of these implants. Substrate geometry is known to affect cell shape, as cells try to optimize their adhesion by adapting to the irregularities beneath, and this in turn profoundly affects their activity. In the present study, we cultured murine calvaria MC3T3-E1 cells on surfaces with pillars arranged as hexagons with two different spacings and observed their morphology during adhesion and growth. Cells on these highly ordered substrates attached and proliferated effectively, showing a marked preference for minimizing the inter-pillar distance, by following specific pathways across adjacent pillars and displaying consistent morphological modules. Moreover, cell behavior appeared to follow tightly controlled patterns of extracellular protein secretion, which preceded and matched cells and, on a sub-cellular level, cytoplasmic orientation. Taken together, these results outline the close integration of surface features, extracellular proteins alignment and cell arrangement, and provide clues on how to control and direct cell spatial order and cell morphology by simply acting on inter-pillar spacing.

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