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Confinement of Transmembrane Cell Receptors in Tunable Stripe Micropatterns

Year: 2005

Journal: Published on Web 01/08/2005, 20111221

Authors: Oliver Purrucker, Anton Förtig, Karin Lüdtke, Rainer Jordan, and Motomu Tanaka

Organizations: Contribution from the Lehrstuhl für Biophysik E22, Technische Universität München, JameFranck-s-Strasse, 85748 Garching, Germany, Lehrstuhl für Makromolekulare Stoffe, Technische Universität München, Lichtenbergstrasse 4, 85748 Garching, Germany, and Department of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Material Science, Polytechnic University, Six Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, New York 11201

We report a simple method to confine transmembrane cell receptors in stripe micropatterns of a lipid/lipopolymer monolayer, which are formed as result of the transfer onto a solid substrate. The stripes are aligned perpendicular to the meniscus, whose periodicity can systematically be tuned by the transfer velocity. This strongly suggests the dominant role of the cooperative interaction between the film and substrate. Selective fluorescence labeling of lipids and lipopolymers confirms that the observed patterns coincide with the demixing of two species. Covalent coupling of polymer headgroups enables us to use the stripe patterns as a support for a lipid bilayer membrane. Spreading of lipid vesicles with platelet integrin αIIbβ3  on a self-assembled membrane micropattern demonstrates that cell adhesion receptors are selectively incorporated into the lipopolymer-rich region. The method established here provides us with a tunable template for the confinement of receptor proteins to geometrically control the cell adhesion.