Abstract

In the last decade, the use of photolithography for the fabrication of structured substrates with controlled morphological patterns that are able to interact with cells at micrometric and nanometric size scales is strongly growing. A promising simple and versatile microfabrication method is based on the physical mass transport induced by visible light in photosensitive azobenzene-containing polymers (or azopolymers). Such light-driven material transport produces a modulation of the surface of the azopolymer film, whose geometry is controlled by the intensity and the polarization distributions of the irradiated light. Herein, two anisotropic structured azopolymer films have been used as substrates to evaluate the effects of topological signals on the in vitro response of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). The light-induced substrate patterns consist of parallel microgrooves, which are produced in a spatially confined or over large-scale areas of the samples, respectively. The analysis of confocal optical images of the in vitro hMSC cells grown on the patterned films offered relevant information about cell morphology—i.e., nuclei deformation and actin filaments elongation—in relation to the geometry and the spatial extent of the structured area of substrates. The results, together with the possibility of simple, versatile, and cost-effective light-induced structuration of azopolymers, promise the successful use of these materials as anisotropic platforms to study the cell guidance mechanisms governing in vitro tissue formation.

Highlights

  • The extracellular matrix (ECM) enormously contributes to the ultimate properties of tissues and organs [1]

  • Such light-driven material transport produces a modulation of the surface of the azopolymer film, whose geometry is controlled by the intensity and the polarization distributions of the irradiated light

  • The consequence of this molecular light-fueled material motion is the macroscopic structuration of azopolymer films and microvolumes, whose geometry depends on the intensity and polarization distributions of the irradiated light field [11,12,13,14,15]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The extracellular matrix (ECM) enormously contributes to the ultimate properties of tissues and organs [1]. The use of the azobenzene-containing polymers as substrates for cell guidance and ECM mimicking can take advantage of the reversible switch of their electric properties produced, simultaneously to the macroscopic mass displacement, by the photo-orientation of the azobenzene molecules under illumination [16,21]. This effect can enhance the conjugation of polymeric chains [22,23,24], increasing the charge carrier mobility and the ionic conductivity in aqueous solutions

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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