Abstract

Cells are sensitive to topological, chemical, and electrical properties of substrates on which they are grown. However, most studies of cell-surface interactions have neglected electrical effects or confounded them with other substrate properties. The use of nanofabrication technology has made it possible to fabricate optically transparent surfaces with controlled chemistry and topology, and with active, controllable surface charge density in domains as small as 1-4 microns. Human monocytes incubated on polystyrene with 3.3 microns-wide strip domains, alternately charged so as to maintain overall charge neutrality, show significant charge density and time-dependent increases (greater than twofold) in cell area and cell perimeter after challenge with a phagocytic trigger (human IgG opsonized zymosan particles). Additional utlrastructural studies on silicon dioxide substrates show charge-density-dependent qualitative morphological differences. These studies clearly demonstrate that human monocytes respond in vitro to local surface-charge heterogeneity in the absence of substrate topology and compositional variation.

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