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. 2007 Jun;13(6):1205-17.
doi: 10.1089/ten.2006.0330.

Preparation of a functionally flexible, three-dimensional, biomimetic poly(L-lactic acid) scaffold with improved cell adhesion

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Preparation of a functionally flexible, three-dimensional, biomimetic poly(L-lactic acid) scaffold with improved cell adhesion

Jose F Alvarez-Barreto et al. Tissue Eng. 2007 Jun.

Abstract

Poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) is widely used in tissue-engineering applications because of its degradation characteristics and mechanical properties, but it possesses an inert nature, affecting cell-matrix interactions. It is desirable to modify the surface of PLLA to create biomimetic scaffolds that will enhance tissue regeneration. We prepared a functionally flexible, biomimetic scaffold by derivatizing the surface of PLLA foams into primary amines, activated pyridylthiols, or sulfhydryl groups, allowing a wide variety of modifications. Poly(L-lysine) (polyK) was physically entrapped uniformly throughout the scaffold surface and in a controllable fashion by soaking the foams in an acetone-water mixture and later in a polyK solution in dimethylsulfoxide. Arginine-glycine-aspartic acid-cysteine (RGDC) adhesion peptide was linked to the polyK via creating disulfide bonds introduced through the use of the linker N-succinimidyl-3-(2-pyridylthiol)-propionate. Presence of RGDC on the surface of PLLA 2-dimensional (2-D) disks and 3-D scaffolds increased cell surface area and the number of adherent mesenchymal stem cells. We have proposed a methodology for creating biomimetic scaffolds that is easy to execute, flexible, and nondestructive.

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