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Article
Construction of a Tethered Poly(ethylene glycol) Surface Gradient For Studies of Cell Adhesion Kinetics
Langmuir
  • K. Mougin, University of Virginia
  • A. S. Ham, University of Virginia
  • M. B. Lawrence, University of Virginia
  • E. J. Fernandez, University of Virginia
  • Andrew C. Hillier, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2005
DOI
10.1021/la050613v
Abstract

Surface gradients can be used to perform a wide range of functions and represent a novel experimental platform for combinatorial discovery and analysis. In this work, a gradient in the coverage of a surface-immobilized poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) layer is constructed to interrogate cell adhesion on a solid surface. Variation of surface coverage is achieved by controlled transport of a reactive PEG precursor from a point source through a hydrated gel. Immobilization of PEG is achieved by covalent attachment of the PEG molecule via direct coupling chemistry to a cystamine self-assembled monolayer on gold. This represents a simple method for creating spatial gradients in surface chemistry that does not require special instrumentation or microfabrication procedures. The structure and spatial distribution of the PEG gradient are evaluated via ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy. A cell adhesion assay using bovine arteriole endothelium cells is used to study the influence of PEG thickness and chain density on biocompatibility. The kinetics of cell adhesion are quantified as a function of the thickness of the PEG layer. Results depict a surface in which the variation in layer thickness along the PEG gradient strongly modifies the biological response.

Comments

This article is from Langmuir 21 (2005): 4809-4812, doi: 10.1021/la050613v. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
American Chemical Society
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
K. Mougin, A. S. Ham, M. B. Lawrence, E. J. Fernandez, et al.. "Construction of a Tethered Poly(ethylene glycol) Surface Gradient For Studies of Cell Adhesion Kinetics" Langmuir Vol. 21 Iss. 11 (2005) p. 4809 - 4812
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/andrew_hillier/4/