Dijous 11 de juny, el Dipòsit Digital no estarà operatiu de 15:00 a 17:00 h per tasques de manteniment. Disculpeu les molèsties.
El jueves 11 de Junio, el Dipòsit Digital no estará operativo de 15:00 a 17:00 h debido a tareas de mantenimiento. Disculpen las molestias.
Thursday, Jun 11th, the Digital Repository will be unavailable due to a system update.

Document type

Article

Publication date

Publication license

cc by (c) Hortigüela et al., 2019
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/132326

Large-area biomolecule nanopatterns on diblock copolymer surfaces for cell adhesion studies

Journal Title

Director/Tutor

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Cell membrane receptors bind to extracellular ligands, triggering intracellular signal transduction pathways that result in specific cell function. Some receptors require to be associated forming clusters for effective signaling. Increasing evidences suggest that receptor clustering is subjected to spatially controlled ligand distribution at the nanoscale. Herein we present a method to produce in an easy, straightforward process, nanopatterns of biomolecular ligands to study ligand–receptor processes involving multivalent interactions. We based our platform in self-assembled diblock copolymers composed of poly(styrene) (PS) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) that form PMMA nanodomains in a closed-packed hexagonal arrangement. Upon PMMA selective functionalization, biomolecular nanopatterns over large areas are produced. Nanopattern size and spacing can be controlled by the composition of the block-copolymer selected. Nanopatterns of cell adhesive peptides of different size and spacing were produced, and their impact in integrin receptor clustering and the formation of cell focal adhesions was studied. Cells on ligand nanopatterns showed an increased number of focal contacts, which were, in turn, more matured than those found in cells cultured on randomly presenting ligands. These findings suggest that our methodology is a suitable, versatile tool to study and control receptor clustering signaling and downstream cell behavior through a surface-based ligand patterning technique.

Citation

ISSN

Citation

HORTIGÜELA, Verónica, et al. Large-area biomolecule nanopatterns on diblock copolymer surfaces for cell adhesion studies. Nanomaterials. 2019. Vol. 9, num. 579. [consulted: 12 of June of 2026]. Available at: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/132326

Export metadata

JSON - METS

Share record