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Slope-Dependent Cell Motility Enhancements at the Walls of PEG-Hydrogel Microgroove Structures

Abstract

In recent years, research utilizing micro- and nanoscale geometries and structures on biomaterials to manipulate cellular behaviors, such as differentiation, proliferation, survival, and motility, have gained much popularity; however, how the surface microtopography of 3D objects, such as implantable devices, can affect these various cell behaviors still remains largely unknown. In this study, we discuss how the walls of microgroove topography can influence the morphology and the motility of unrestrained cells, in a different fashion from 2D line micropatterns. Here adhesive substrates made of tetra­(polyethylene glycol) (tetra-PEG) hydrogels with microgroove structures or 2D line micropatterns were fabricated, and cell motility on these substrates was evaluated. Interestingly, despite being unconstrained, the cells exhibited drastically different migration behaviors at the edges of the 2D micropatterns and the walls of microgroove structures. In addition to acquiring a unilamellar morphology, the cells increased their motility by roughly 3-fold on the microgroove structures, compared with the 2D counterpart or the nonpatterned surface. Immunostaining revealed that this behavior was dependent on the alignment and the aggregation of the actin filaments, and by varying the slope of the microgroove walls, it was found that relatively upright walls are necessary for this cell morphology alterations. Further progress in this research will not only deepen our understanding of topography-assisted biological phenomena like cancer metastasis but also enable precise, topography-guided manipulation of cell motility for applications such as cancer diagnosis and cell sorting

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Last time updated on 12/02/2018

This paper was published in FigShare.

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