The dependence of fibrillar adhesions in human fibroblasts on substratum chemistry
- PMID: 16023199
- DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2005.05.076
The dependence of fibrillar adhesions in human fibroblasts on substratum chemistry
Abstract
Little is known about the influence of substratum properties and composition on the ability of cells to translocate alpha5beta1 integrins and to form fibrillar adhesion. We have examined the impact of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) bearing different functional end groups (amines (NH2) or carboxylic acids (COOH)) on the presence of fibrillar adhesions in human fibroblasts attached to fibronectin-coated SAMs. Most of the fibroblasts incubated in serum-free medium for 2 h on COOH showed segregation of focal contact components (alphav integrin subunits, phosphotyrosine proteins) and fibrillar adhesions (alpha5 integrin subunits, tensin) while the majority of cells plated on NH(2) did not. Analysis of fibronectin fibril formation confirmed also that human fibroblasts plated on COOH formed matrix fibrils significantly better. The surface-associated alpha5 to alphav integrin ratio was smaller in cells on COOH than on NH2 due to a decreased alpha5 integrin binding. In addition, human fibroblasts migrated more readily on COOH in comparison to NH2 which points to a different binding strength of integrins to the substratum. Overall, the results indicate that the molecular composition of substrata has a strong influence on FN matrix formation by promoting or inhibiting segregation of focal and fibrillar adhesions.
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