Biomaterials, Biodegradables and Biomimetics Research Group

Papers in Scientific Journals

Template mediated protein self-assembly as a valuable tool in regenerative therapy

Abstract

The assembly of natural proteinaceous biopolymers into macro-scale architectures is of great importance in synthetic biology, soft-material science and regenerative therapy. The self-assembly of protein tends to be limited due to anisotropic interactions among protein molecules, poor solubility and stability. Here, we introduce a unique platform to self-immobilize diverse proteins (fibrous and globular, positively and negatively charged, low and high molecular weight) using silicon surfaces with pendant –NH2 groups via a facile one step diffusion limited aggregation (DLA) method. All the experimental proteins (type I collagen, bovine serum albumin and cytochrome C) self-assemble into seaweed-like branched dendritic architectures via classical DLA in the absence of any electrolytes. The notable differences in branching architectures are due to dissimilarities in protein colloidal sub-units, which is typical for each protein type, along with the heterogeneous distribution of surface –NH2 groups. Fractal analysis of assembled structures is used to explain the underlying route of fractal deposition; which concludes how proteins with different functionality can yield similar assembly. Further, the nano-micro-structured surfaces can be used to provide functional topographical cues to study cellular responses, as demonstrated using rat bone marrow stem cells. The results indicate that the immobilization of proteins via DLA does not affect functionality, instead serving as topographical cues to guide cell morphology. This indicates a promising design strategy at the tissue-material interface and is anticipated to guide future surface modifications. A cost-effective standard templating strategy is therefore proposed for fundamental and applied particle aggregation studies, which can be used at multiple length scales for biomaterial design and surface reformation.

Journal
Biomedical Materials
Volume
13
Edition
2018
Issue
4
Pagination
044101
Publisher
IOP Publishing
ISSN
1748-605X
URL
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-605X/aab2fe
Keywords
bovine serum albumin, cytochrome C, elf-assembly, Si-surface, type I collagen
Rights
Closed Access
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Status
published
Project
FoReCaST
Year of Publication
2018
DOI
10.1088/1748-605X/aab2fe
Date Published
2018-04-11
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