Abstract

Human epidermal stem cells initiate terminal differentiation when spreading is restricted on ECM-coated micropatterned islands, soft hydrogels or hydrogel-nanoparticle composites with high nanoparticle spacing. The effect of substrate topography, however, is incompletely understood. To explore this, primary human keratinocytes enriched for stem cells were seeded on a topographical library with over 2000 different topographies in the micrometre range. Twenty-four hours later the proportion of cells expressing the differentiation marker transglutaminase-1 was determined by high content imaging. As predicted, topographies that prevented spreading promoted differentiation. However, we also identified topographies that supported differentiation of highly spread cells. Topographies supporting differentiation of spread cells were more irregular than those supporting differentiation of round cells. Low topography coverage promoted differentiation of spread cells, whereas high coverage promoted differentiation of round cells. Based on these observations we fabricated a topography in 6-well plate format that supported differentiation of spread cells, enabling us to examine cell responses at higher resolution. We found that differentiated spread cells did not assemble significant numbers of hemidesmosomes, focal adhesions, adherens junctions, desmosomes or tight junctions. They did, however, organise the actin cytoskeleton in response to the topographies. Rho kinase inhibition and blebbistatin treatment blocked the differentiation of spread cells, whereas SRF inhibition did not. These observations suggest a potential role for actin polymerization and actomyosin contraction in the topography-induced differentiation of spread cells. Statement of SignificanceThe epidermis is the outer covering of the skin. It is formed by layers of cells called keratinocytes. The basal cell layer contains stem cells, which divide to replace cells in the outermost layers that are lost through a process known as differentiation. In this manuscript we have developed surfaces that promote the differentiation of epidermal stem cells in order to understand the signals that control differentiation. The experimental tools we have developed have the potential to help us to devise new treatments that control diseases such as psoriasis and eczema in which epidermal stem cell proliferation and differentiation are disturbed.

Highlights

  • To investigate the effect of topography on human epidermal stem cells, we focused on a library of micron-scale topographies, known as the TopoChip, which has been used previously to identify topographies that regulate the behaviour of other cell types [8,9]

  • This provides topographies of various shapes, densities and regularities and represents an unbiased tool to study the effect of surface topography on cell behaviour [8]

  • Since F-actin is reported to be a regulator of epidermal differentiation [6], we hypothesized that the actin rings that formed on topography 1 might play a role in promoting the differentiation of spread cells, either via an increase in actin polymerization or actomyosin contractility

Read more

Summary

Statement of Significance

The epidermis is the outer covering of the skin. It is formed by layers of cells called keratinocytes. The basal cell layer contains stem cells, which divide to replace cells in the outermost layers that are lost through a process known as differentiation. In this manuscript we have developed surfaces that promote the differentiation of epidermal stem cells in order to understand the signals that control differentiation. The experimental tools we have developed have the potential to help us to devise new treatments that control diseases such as psoriasis and eczema in which epidermal stem cell proliferation and differentiation are disturbed.

Introduction
TopoChip fabrication
Fabrication of polystyrene topographies in 6-well plate format
Cell culture
Pharmacological inhibitors
Immunofluorescence microscopy
Real time quantitative RT-PCR analysis
Reproducibility and statistics
Topography affects the morphology of differentiating keratinocytes
Quantification of differentiation and morphological phenotype
In silico prediction of differentiation and spreading
Creation of topographies on a large scale
Distribution of adhesion molecules
Role of actin polymerization and actomyosin contractility
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call