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Lysine-Appended Polydiacetylene Scaffolds for Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells
32
Citations
52
References
2013
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomaterials DesignBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringPolymersRegenerative MedicineHydrogelsRegenerative BiomaterialsMatrix BiologyChemical PropertiesStem CellsPolymer ChemistryBiomaterialsBalanced WettabilityFunctional Tissue EngineeringMesenchymal Stem CellBiomolecular EngineeringPolymer ScienceStem Cell ResearchFibrous PolymersStem-cell TherapyMedicineLysine-appended Polydiacetylene ScaffoldsBiocompatible Material
We report on the self-assembly based fabrication of fibrous polymers for tissue engineering applications. Directed self-assembly followed by polymerization of lysine-appended diacetylenes generated a variety of polymers (P1-P5) with distinct chemical properties. The self-assembly along with the conjugated double and triple bonds and rigid geometry of diacetylene backbone imposed a nanofibrous morphology on the resulting polymers. Chemical properties including wettability of the polymers were tuned by using lysine (Lys) with orthogonal protecting groups (Boc and Fmoc). These Lys-appended polydiacetylene scaffolds were compared in terms of their efficiency toward human mesenchymal stem cells adhesion and spreading. Interestingly, polymer P4 containing Lys N(α)-NH2 and Lys N(ε)-Boc with balanced wettability supported cell adhesion better than the more hydrophobic polymer P2 with N(ε)-Boc and N(α)-Fmoc or more hydrophilic polymer P5 containing free N(ε) and N(α) amino groups. The molecular level control in the fabrication of nanofibrous polymers compared with other existing methods for the generation of fibrous polymers is the hallmark of this work.
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