Neurons sense nanoscale roughness with nanometer sensitivity
- 22 March 2010
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 107 (14), 6264-6269
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0914456107
Abstract
The interaction between cells and nanostructured materials is attracting increasing interest, because of the possibility to open up novel concepts for the design of smart nanobiomaterials with active biological functionalities. In this frame we investigated the response of human neuroblastoma cell line (SH-SY5Y) to gold surfaces with different levels of nanoroughness. To achieve a precise control of the nanoroughness with nanometer resolution, we exploited a wet chemistry approach based on spontaneous galvanic displacement reaction. We demonstrated that neurons sense and actively respond to the surface nanotopography, with a surprising sensitivity to variations of few nanometers. We showed that focal adhesion complexes, which allow cellular sensing, are strongly affected by nanostructured surfaces, leading to a marked decrease in cell adhesion. Moreover, cells adherent on nanorough surfaces exhibit loss of neuron polarity, Golgi apparatus fragmentation, nuclear condensation, and actin cytoskeleton that is not functionally organized. Apoptosis/necrosis assays established that nanoscale features induce cell death by necrosis, with a trend directly related to roughness values. Finally, by seeding SH-SY5Y cells onto micropatterned flat and nanorough gold surfaces, we demonstrated the possibility to realize substrates with cytophilic or cytophobic behavior, simply by fine-tuning their surface topography at nanometer scale. Specific and functional adhesion of cells occurred only onto flat gold stripes, with a clear self-alignment of neurons, delivering a simple and elegant approach for the design and development of biomaterials with precise nanostructure-triggered biological responses.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nanoimprinted Thin Films of Reactive, Azlactone-Containing Polymers: Combining Methods for the Topographic Patterning of Cell Substrates with Opportunities for Facile Post-Fabrication Chemical FunctionalizationBiomacromolecules, 2009
- Stem cell fate dictated solely by altered nanotube dimensionProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009
- Physical approaches to biomaterial designNature Materials, 2009
- Integrin-linked kinase – essential roles in physiology and cancer biologyJournal of Cell Science, 2008
- Vinculin controls focal adhesion formation by direct interactions with talin and actinThe Journal of cell biology, 2007
- Functional atlas of the integrin adhesomeNature Cell Biology, 2007
- Cell Spreading and Focal Adhesion Dynamics Are Regulated by Spacing of Integrin LigandsBiophysical Journal, 2007
- Anisotropy of cell adhesive microenvironment governs cell internal organization and orientation of polarityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Focal adhesions regulate Aβ signaling and cell death in Alzheimer's diseaseBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 2006
- Local force and geometry sensing regulate cell functionsNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2006