Polymer Chain Length Effects
on Fibroblast Attachment
on Nylon-3-Modified Surfaces
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Abstract
Nylon-3 polymers have a polyamide backbone reminiscent
of that
found in proteins (β- vs α-amino acid residues, respectively),
which makes these materials interesting for biological applications.
Because of the versatility of the ring-opening polymerization process
and the variety of β-lactam starting materials available, the
structure of nylon-3 copolymers is highly amenable to alteration.
A previous study showed that relatively subtle changes in the structure
or ratio of hydrophobic and cationic subunits that comprise these
polymers can result in significant changes in the ability of nylon-3-bearing
surfaces to support cell adhesion and spreading. In the present study,
we have exploited the highly tailorable nature of these polymers to
synthesize new versions possessing a wide range of chain lengths,
with the intent of optimizing these materials for use as cell-supportive
substrates. We find that longer nylon-3 chains lead to better fibroblast
attachment on modified surfaces and that at the optimal chain lengths
less hydrophobic subunits are superior. The best polymers we identified
are comparable to an RGD-containing peptide in supporting fibroblast
attachment. The results described here will help to focus future efforts
aimed at refining nylon-3 copolymer substrates for specific tissue
engineering applications