3 research outputs found
Polysaccharide films built by simultaneous or alternate spray: a rapid way to engineer biomaterial surfaces.
We investigated polysaccharide films obtained by simultaneous and alternate spraying of a chitosan (CHI) solution as polycation and hyaluronic acid (HA), alginate (ALG), and chondroitin sulfate (CS) solutions as polyanions. For simultaneous spraying, the film thickness increases linearly with the cumulative spraying time and passes through a maximum for polyanion/CHI molar charge ratios lying between 0.6 and 1.2. The size of polyanion/CHI complexes formed in solution was compared with the simultaneously sprayed film growth rate as a function of the polyanion/CHI molar charge ratio. A good correlation was found. This suggests the importance of polyanion/polycation complexation in the simultaneous spraying process. Depending on the system, the film topography is either liquid-like or granular. Film biocompatibility was evaluated using human gingival fibroblasts. A small or no difference is observed in cell viability and adhesion between the two deposition processes. The CHI/HA system appears to be the best for cell adhesion inducing the clustering of CD44, a cell surface HA receptor, at the membrane of cells. Simultaneous or alternate spraying of CHI/HA appears thus to be a convenient and fast procedure for biomaterial surface modifications.journal articleresearch support, non-u.s. gov't2012 Jun 052012 05 23importe
Polysaccharide Films Built by Simultaneous or Alternate Spray: A Rapid Way to Engineer Biomaterial Surfaces
We investigated polysaccharide films obtained by simultaneous
and
alternate spraying of a chitosan (CHI) solution as polycation and
hyaluronic acid (HA), alginate (ALG), and chondroitin sulfate (CS)
solutions as polyanions. For simultaneous spraying, the film thickness
increases linearly with the cumulative spraying time and passes through
a maximum for polyanion/CHI molar charge ratios lying between 0.6
and 1.2. The size of polyanion/CHI complexes formed in solution was
compared with the simultaneously sprayed film growth rate as a function
of the polyanion/CHI molar charge ratio. A good correlation was found.
This suggests the importance of polyanion/polycation complexation
in the simultaneous spraying process. Depending on the system, the
film topography is either liquid-like or granular. Film biocompatibility
was evaluated using human gingival fibroblasts. A small or no difference
is observed in cell viability and adhesion between the two deposition
processes. The CHI/HA system appears to be the best for cell adhesion
inducing the clustering of CD44, a cell surface HA receptor, at the
membrane of cells. Simultaneous or alternate spraying of CHI/HA appears
thus to be a convenient and fast procedure for biomaterial surface
modifications