Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces

Objective: Topography, chemistry, and energy of titanium (Ti) implants alter cell response through variations in protein adsorption, integrin expression, and downstream cell signaling. However, the contribution of surface energy on cell response is difficult to isolate because altered hydrophilicity...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Plaisance, Marc Charles
Other Authors: Boyan, Barbara D
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53730
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-53730
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-537302015-08-19T15:34:12ZCellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured SurfacesPlaisance, Marc CharlesBiomaterialsSurface propertiesTitaniumOsteoblastOsseointegrationImplantsObjective: Topography, chemistry, and energy of titanium (Ti) implants alter cell response through variations in protein adsorption, integrin expression, and downstream cell signaling. However, the contribution of surface energy on cell response is difficult to isolate because altered hydrophilicity can result from changes in surface chemistry or microstructure. Our aim was to examine a unique system of wettability gradients created on microstructured Ti on osteoblast maturation and phenotype. Method: A surface energy gradient was created on sand-blasted/acid-etched (SLA) Ti surfaces. Surfaces were treated with oxygen plasma for 2 minutes, and then allowed to age for 1, 12, 80, or 116 hours to generate a wettability gradient. Surfaces were characterized by contact angle and SEM. MG63 cells were cultured on SLA or experimental SLA surfaces to confluence on TCPS. Osteoblast differentiation (IBSP, RUNX2, ALP, OCN, OPG) and integrin subunits (ITG2, ITGA5, ITGAV, ITGB1) measured by real-time PCR (n=6 surfaces per variable analyzed by ANOVA/Bonferroni’s modified Student’s t-test). Result: After plasma treatment, SLA surface topography was retained. A gradient of wettability was obtained, with contact angles of 32.0° (SLA116), 23.3° (SLA80), 12.5° (SLA12), 7.9° (SLA1). All surfaces were significantly more hydrophilic than the original SLA surface (126.8°). Integrin expression was affected by wettability. ITGA2 was higher on wettable surfaces than on SLA, but was highest on SLA1. ITGAV and ITGB1 were decreased on hydrophilic surfaces, but ITGA5 was not affected. IBSP, RUNX2, and ALP increased and OPG decreased with increasing wettability. OCN decreased with increasing wettability, but levels on the most wettable surface were similar to SLA. Conclusion: Here we elucidated the role of surface energy on cell response using surfaces with the same topography and chemistry. The results show that osteoblastic maturation was regulated in a wettability-dependent manner and suggest that the effects are mediated by integrins.Georgia Institute of TechnologyBoyan, Barbara D2015-08-18T19:14:53Z2015-08-19T05:30:05Z2013-122013-12-16December 20132015-08-18T19:14:54ZUndergraduate Research Option Thesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53730en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Biomaterials
Surface properties
Titanium
Osteoblast
Osseointegration
Implants
spellingShingle Biomaterials
Surface properties
Titanium
Osteoblast
Osseointegration
Implants
Plaisance, Marc Charles
Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
description Objective: Topography, chemistry, and energy of titanium (Ti) implants alter cell response through variations in protein adsorption, integrin expression, and downstream cell signaling. However, the contribution of surface energy on cell response is difficult to isolate because altered hydrophilicity can result from changes in surface chemistry or microstructure. Our aim was to examine a unique system of wettability gradients created on microstructured Ti on osteoblast maturation and phenotype. Method: A surface energy gradient was created on sand-blasted/acid-etched (SLA) Ti surfaces. Surfaces were treated with oxygen plasma for 2 minutes, and then allowed to age for 1, 12, 80, or 116 hours to generate a wettability gradient. Surfaces were characterized by contact angle and SEM. MG63 cells were cultured on SLA or experimental SLA surfaces to confluence on TCPS. Osteoblast differentiation (IBSP, RUNX2, ALP, OCN, OPG) and integrin subunits (ITG2, ITGA5, ITGAV, ITGB1) measured by real-time PCR (n=6 surfaces per variable analyzed by ANOVA/Bonferroni’s modified Student’s t-test). Result: After plasma treatment, SLA surface topography was retained. A gradient of wettability was obtained, with contact angles of 32.0° (SLA116), 23.3° (SLA80), 12.5° (SLA12), 7.9° (SLA1). All surfaces were significantly more hydrophilic than the original SLA surface (126.8°). Integrin expression was affected by wettability. ITGA2 was higher on wettable surfaces than on SLA, but was highest on SLA1. ITGAV and ITGB1 were decreased on hydrophilic surfaces, but ITGA5 was not affected. IBSP, RUNX2, and ALP increased and OPG decreased with increasing wettability. OCN decreased with increasing wettability, but levels on the most wettable surface were similar to SLA. Conclusion: Here we elucidated the role of surface energy on cell response using surfaces with the same topography and chemistry. The results show that osteoblastic maturation was regulated in a wettability-dependent manner and suggest that the effects are mediated by integrins.
author2 Boyan, Barbara D
author_facet Boyan, Barbara D
Plaisance, Marc Charles
author Plaisance, Marc Charles
author_sort Plaisance, Marc Charles
title Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
title_short Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
title_full Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
title_fullStr Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
title_full_unstemmed Cellular Response to Surface Wettability Gradient on Microtextured Surfaces
title_sort cellular response to surface wettability gradient on microtextured surfaces
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53730
work_keys_str_mv AT plaisancemarccharles cellularresponsetosurfacewettabilitygradientonmicrotexturedsurfaces
_version_ 1716817110771957760