학술논문

Amino acid composition of nanofibrillar self-assembling peptide hydrogels affects responses of periodontal tissue cells in vitro
ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
International Journal of Nanomedicine. Annual 2018, Vol. 13, p6717, 17 p.
Subject
Evaluation
Mechanical properties
Peptides -- Mechanical properties
Biological products -- Evaluation -- Mechanical properties
Amino acids -- Evaluation -- Mechanical properties
Porosity -- Mechanical properties
Adsorption -- Mechanical properties
Cell differentiation -- Mechanical properties
EDTA -- Evaluation -- Mechanical properties
Language
English
ISSN
1178-2013
Abstract
Introduction The development of therapies for the regeneration of tissue defects at the interface between soft and hard tissue (eg, ligament-to-bone within the periodontium) poses a challenge due to the [...]
Background: The regeneration of tissue defects at the interface between soft and hard tissue, eg, in the periodontium, poses a challenge due to the divergent tissue requirements. A class of biomaterials that may support the regeneration at the soft-to-hard tissue interface are self-assembling peptides (SAPs), as their physicochemical and mechanical properties can be rationally designed to meet tissue requirements. Materials and methods: In this work, we investigated the effect of two single-component and two complementary [beta]-sheet forming SAP systems on their hydrogel properties such as nanofibrillar architecture, surface charge, and protein adsorption as well as their influence on cell adhesion, morphology, growth, and differentiation. Results: We showed that these four 11-amino acid SAP (P11-SAP) hydrogels possessed physico-chemical characteristics dependent on their amino acid composition that allowed variabilities in nanofibrillar network architecture, surface charge, and protein adsorption (eg, the single-component systems demonstrated an ~30% higher porosity and an almost 2-fold higher protein adsorption compared with the complementary systems). Cytocompatibility studies revealed similar results for cells cultured on the four P11-SAP hydrogels compared with cells on standard cell culture surfaces. The single-component P11-SAP systems showed a 1.7-fold increase in cell adhesion and cellular growth compared with the complementary P11-SAP systems. Moreover, significantly enhanced osteogenic differentiation of human calvarial osteoblasts was detected for the single-component P11-SAP system hydrogels compared with standard cell cultures. Conclusion: Thus, single-component system P11-SAP hydrogels can be assessed as suitable scaffolds for periodontal regeneration therapy, as they provide adjustable, extracellular matrix-mimetic nanofibrillar architecture and favorable cellular interaction with periodontal cells. Keywords: self-assembling peptides, SAPs, P11-SAP hydrogels, surface charge, protein adsorption, cell proliferation, osteogenic differentiation, periodontal tissue regeneration