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Control of cell adhesion and spreading by spatial microarranged PEO-like and pdAA domains

Year: 2005

Journal: Surface & Coatings Technology 200 (2005) 51- 57, 20100827

Authors: Sardella E., Gristina T, R., Ceccone G., Gilliland D., Papadopoulou-Bouraoui A., Rossi F., Senesi G.S., Detomaso L.,  Favia P., dAgostino R.

Last authors: R. dAgostino

Organizations: Department of Chemistry, University of Bari, Via Orabona 4, 70126 Bari, Italy, Institute of Inorganic Methodologies and Plasmas-Bari, CNR, Via Orabona 4, 70126, Bari, Italy, Joint Research Centre, Institute of Health and Consumer protection, Biomedical Materials and System Unit, Via E. Fermi 1, Ispra (VA), Italy

Country: Italy

Microstructured surfaces are widely used in cell culture experiments to understand the fundamentals of cell-material interactions by a spatial control of cell adhesion and spreading. Recent studies have documented that both substrate chemistry and topography are tightly correlated to cell behaviours. For this reason a wide range of techniques have been explored for obtaining in a simple and cheap way reproducible patterned substrates. This paper describes how to produce micropatterned substrates by a spatial microarrangment of chemically different domains, produced by plasma deposition. Cell-repulsive zones, obtained by plasma deposited PolyethyleneOxide-like (PEO-like) coating, were alternated with cell-adhesive tracks, namely plasma deposited Acrylic Acid (pdAA) films. Time lapse experiments demonstrated that such patterns, suitable to exert chemical and topographical constraints for cell-adhesion, can also support migration of cells inside the produced pattern.