Publication year
2012Source
Nanomedicine, 8, 3, (2012), pp. 308-17ISSN
Annotation
01 april 2012
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Dentistry
Journal title
Nanomedicine
Volume
vol. 8
Issue
iss. 3
Page start
p. 308
Page end
p. 17
Subject
NCMLS 3: Tissue engineering and pathologyAbstract
The immune response to an implanted biomaterial is orchestrated by macrophages. In this study various nanogrooved patterns were created by using laser interference lithography and reactive ion etching. The created nanogrooves mimic the natural extracellular matrix environment. Macrophage cell culture demonstrated that interleukin 1beta and TNF-alpha cytokine production were upregulated on nanogrooved substrates. In vivo subcutaneous implantation in a validated mouse cage model for 14 days demonstrated that nanogrooves enhanced and guided cell adhesion, and few multinucleated cells were formed. In agreement with the in vitro results, cytokine production was found to be nanogroove dependent, as interleukin 1beta, TNF-alpha, TGF-beta and osteopontin became upregulated. The results indicate that biomaterial surface texturing, especially at the nanometric scale, can be used to control macrophage activation to induce a wound healing response, rather than a profound inflammatory response. From the Clinical Editor: The authors investigate various nano-grooved patterns that mimic the natural extracellular matrix environment and demonstrate (both in macrophage cultures and in vivo) that interleukin 1beta and TNF-alpha cytokine production is dependent upon surface texturing at the nanometric scale. They propose that modified surfaces may trigger macrophage activation to promote a wound healing response.
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- Academic publications [244001]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92816]
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