1 research outputs found
Supercharged Protein Nanosheets for Cell Expansion on Bioemulsions
Cell culture at liquid–liquid interfaces, for
example, at
the surface of oil microdroplets, is an attractive strategy to scale
up adherent cell manufacturing while replacing the use of microplastics.
Such a process requires the adhesion of cells at interfaces stabilized
and reinforced by protein nanosheets displaying not only high elasticity
but also presenting cell adhesive ligands able to bind integrin receptors.
In this report, supercharged albumins are found to form strong elastic
protein nanosheets when co-assembling with the co-surfactant pentafluorobenzoyl
chloride (PFBC) and mediate extracellular matrix (ECM) protein adsorption
and cell adhesion. The interfacial mechanical properties and elasticity
of supercharged nanosheets are characterized by interfacial rheology,
and behaviors are compared to those of native bovine serum albumin,
human serum albumin, and α-lactalbumin. The impact of PFBC on
such assembly is investigated. ECM protein adsorption to resulting
supercharged nanosheets is then quantified via surface plasmon resonance
and fluorescence microscopy, demonstrating that the dual role supercharged
albumins are proposed to play as scaffold protein structuring liquid–liquid
interfaces and substrates for the capture of ECM molecules. Finally,
the adhesion and proliferation of primary human epidermal stem cells
are investigated, at pinned droplets, as well as on bioemulsions stabilized
by corresponding supercharged nanosheets. This study demonstrates
the potential of supercharged proteins for the engineering of biointerfaces
for stem cell manufacturing and draws structure–property relationships
that will guide further engineering of associated systems