Yinan
Ma
ab,
Yong
Shen
*c and
Zhibo
Li
*ab
aSchool of Polymer Science and Engineering, Qingdao University of Science and Technology, Qingdao 266042, China. E-mail: zbli@qust.edu.cn
bLaboratory of Polymer Physics and Chemistry, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
cCollege of Chemical Engineering, Qingdao University of Science and Technology, Qingdao 266042, China. E-mail: shenyong@iccas.ac.cn
First published on 15th November 2016
Surface-grafted poly-γ-benzyl-glutamate brushes with different secondary structures were prepared and used to study the influence of main-chain chirality on cell adhesion behaviors. Cells could adhere and proliferate better on L-type poly-γ-benzyl-glutamate grafted surfaces than on the enantiomers.
Hence, it is crucial to explore cell behaviors on chiral surfaces, but previous studies have been only focused on chirality arising from a single molecule or polymer side-chain. In real living systems, biological events are governed by biomacromolecules that have hierarchical chiral structures, such as globular proteins and double helical DNAs. Therefore, it is of great significance to explore chiral interactions between cells and substrates composed of macromolecules with higher ordered structures in order to better understand life's chirality preference.
Synthetic polypeptide brushes are attractive platforms to generate biomimetic surfaces and interfaces not only because of their potential biodegradability and biocompatibility but also for their tunable secondary structures.18,19 The ordered secondary structures formed by synthetic polypeptide brushes20 such as α-helices and β-sheets, which are similar to natural peptides/proteins,21 provide them with more opportunities to have specific interactions with extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins when used as cell culture surfaces. In contrast to single molecule or polymer side-chain chirality, the main-chain chirality of polypeptides helps them to form hierarchical structures, which better mimic natural biological systems. Herein, we prepared three types of polypeptide-grafted surfaces with different main-chain chiralities using a surface-initiated ring-opening polymerization (SI-ROP) strategy, and studied the crucial role of polypeptide chirality in cell adhesion and proliferation behaviors.
γ-benzyl-L-glutamate NCA (BLG-NCA) and γ-benzyl-D-glutamate NCA (BDG-NCA) were synthesized by phosgenation of γ-benzyl-glutamate using triphosgene in anhydrous THF according to the procedures published by Dorman.22 BLG-NCA and BDG-NCA were recrystallized from a mixture of THF/n-hexane (1:3, v/v) giving white needles. (3-Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane (APTES) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). All other chemicals were purchased from commercial suppliers and used without further purification unless otherwise noted.
Silicon wafers (single side polished, 100 mm diam. × 400 μm thickness, later cut into pieces of 10 mm × 10 mm), quartz wafers (double side polished, 10 mm × 10 mm × 350 μm) and glass coverslips (20 × 20 × 0.17–0.25 mm) were purchased from Beijing Xinxing Braim Technology Co., Ltd (Beijing, China). The various substrates were used according to the intended characterization techniques. Quartz wafers and glass coverslips were used as substrates for CD measurements and cell culture, respectively. The silicon wafers were used as substrates for other measurements in this study.
For cell culture on a surface, PBLG, PBDG, and PBracG grafted and non-treated coverslips (10 mm × 10 mm) were placed in a 24-well plate in triplicate. For sterilization of these substrates, the coverslips were immersed separately in 70% alcohol aqueous solution at ambient temperature for 30 min and then dried with a N2 stream before cell seeding. MG-63 and L929 cells were seeded into the well with a density of 8000–10000 cells per mL. After a 2 h incubation period, the medium was removed carefully without touching the substrates and each well was washed with pre-warmed PBS three times to remove the unattached cells. 1 mL of fresh medium was added into each well and the medium was changed every 2 d. At determined time points (1, 2, 3 and 5 d), the cultured cells on the substrates were washed with pre-warmed PBS, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, stained with calcein AM, DAPI and/or Alexa Fluor 635 Phalloidin, imaged using a confocal laser-scanning microscope (CLSM, Olympus, Tokyo, Japan) and analyzed using ImageJ software. The cell roundness was calculated according to the equation below:
Here we applied ellipsometry to determine the thickness of these polypeptide brushes. The thickness of the PBLG, PBDG and PBracG brushes was 23.0 ± 0.1 nm, 25.5 ± 0.1 nm and 21.6 ± 0.3 nm, respectively. Note that the immobilized APTES layer was found to have a thickness of only 4.8 ± 0.1 nm. Considering that these polypeptide brushes were prepared using the exact same reaction conditions, the similar thicknesses suggest that the PBLG, PBDG and PBracG brushes have comparable polymerization degrees and grafting densities. To further demonstrate the successful preparation of the polypeptide brushes, XPS was performed for the APTES-immobilized and polypeptide brush grafted silicon surfaces. As shown in Fig. S1 (see ESI†), all of the survey spectra showed the presence of C1s, O1s, and N1s signals, which were in agreement with the chemical compositions and structures of the modified substrates. As shown in Fig. S1a (ESI†), the high-resolution C1s scan of the APTES-immobilized silicon wafer can be deconvoluted into two signals with a relative area ratio of 1:2, which was consistent with the methylene groups in different chemical environments. The high-resolution C1s scans of the polypeptide brushes with different chiralities shown in Fig. S1b–d (ESI†) were virtually identical, indicating that they had the same chemical structure and composition. These scans could be deconvoluted into 4 signals with expected peak areas, which were assigned to the ester/amide CO peaks at 288.6 eV (signal d), the α-C peak and a C–O peak at 286.5 eV (signal c), the methylene peaks neighbouring the ester groups at 285.2 eV (signal b), and the signal belonging to the other C–C/CC peaks at 284.4 eV.
Furthermore, AFM characterization showed that these three types of polypeptide brush grafted substrates were identical in surface morphology. They were found to be quite uniform in the large-scale range as shown in Fig. S2 (see ESI†). By analysing 6 images obtained from different positions, the average root mean square (RMS) roughness was calculated to be 3.56 ± 0.25, 3.49 ± 0.68 and 3.47 ± 0.12 nm for the PBLG, PBDG and PBracG-grafted substrates, respectively. Moreover, water contact angle (WCA) measurements were performed to characterize the wettability of these surfaces. Images are also shown in the bottom panels of Fig. S2 (ESI†), and the WCAs were calculated to be 80.7 ± 0.6°, 80.5 ± 1.3°, and 80.3 ± 0.9° for the PBLG, PBDG and PBracG-grafted surfaces, respectively. These results demonstrated that these polypeptide-grafted surfaces have comparable roughness and wettability.
The chiralities and secondary structures of the surface-grafted polypeptides were characterized using CD spectroscopy. Fig. 1a shows the CD spectra of the corresponding polypeptide brushes at the same effective concentration, which was suggested by the similar UV absorbance intensities shown in Fig. 1b. The negative bands at 222 and 208 nm and a positive band at around 195 nm in Fig. 1a indicate that the PBLG brushes adopted a right-handed α-helical confirmation, while the curve in the mirror image of the PBDG brushes in comparison with the PBLG brushes showed a left-handed conformation.25 In contrast, the PBracG brushes showed negligible intensity in their CD spectrum as expected, which revealed the absence of an ordered secondary structure even though they were composed of chiral amino acid monomers. Here the chirality of the polypeptide brushes was not the simple side-chain molecule chirality reported previously, but the main-chain chirality arising from the polypeptide secondary structure, which was closer to the chirality observed in biological systems.
Based on the structural characterization, we could conclude that these three types of polypeptide brush grafted substrates had the same chemical compositions and similar thicknesses, roughness and wettability. The only difference was the different secondary structure induced by the chirality of the amino acid repeat units. Therefore, we studied the cell adhesion and proliferation behaviors on different surfaces to explore how the main chain chirality influences cell behaviors. We seeded L929 cells separately onto the PBLG, PBDG and PBracG-grafted substrates and an untreated coverslip. As shown in Fig. 2a, the number of adhered live cells on the PBLG and PBracG-grafted substrates and coverslip that had been cultured for 1 day was almost the same, but was much higher than on the PBDG-grafted substrate. The quantitative analysis in Fig. 2b also shows that the cell density on the PBDG substrate was almost 4 times lower than that on the other three substrates. The lower cell density for the PBDG-grafted substrate is due to the initial lower density of adhered cells for the first 2 hours compared to the other substrates, which suggests that the different cell adhesion behaviors are induced by the main-chain chirality of the polypeptide. After culturing for 3 days, the cell-growth density was almost proportional to the original adhesion density for each surface, suggesting that the cell adhesion density is crucial for further proliferation. The cells on the PBLG-grafted substrate showed superior proliferation speeds over the others, while the cell density on the PBDG-grafted substrate was still the lowest. Furthermore, the homogeneity of the cell layer was also found to be different. The cell layers on the PBLG and PBracG-grafted substrates were relatively homogeneous, and cell clusters were found on the coverslip while large areas of the PBDG-grafted substrate were found to be empty without any cells.
To further study the effect of different culture substrates on the cell morphology, we used the same method to culture the L929 cells for 1 day and stained the F-actin and nucleus so that they could be observed using a CLSM microscope. As shown in Fig. 3a, most of the adhered cells on the PBLG and PBracG-grafted substrates and coverslip showed elongated morphologies, whereas the cells on the PBDG-grafted substrate mainly had a round morphology. Here we chose the parameter cell roundness to characterize the cell morphology quantitatively. The cell roundness changes within the range of 0–1, where the value for a completely round cell is 1. The corresponding average cell roundness data is shown in Fig. 3b and the results indicate that the cells on all of the substrates had an average cell roundness of about 0.6, but the value for the cells on the PBDG-grafted substrates was significantly higher than that on the PBLG-grafted substrates. On the basis of all of the results for the cell density and morphology for the L929 cells, we found that the chirality of the polypeptide brushes played an important role in regulating cell behaviors. The observed differences in the cell morphology indicated different cell adhesion strengths, which influenced the initial cell adhesion density. The initial differences in the cell adhesion density influenced cell proliferation on the different chiral poly-γ-benzyl-glutamate brush grafted substrates. The PBLG-grafted substrates were well suited for cell adhesion and proliferation, because the adhered cells exhibited polygon or fusiform shapes and could proliferate quite quickly and homogenously. The cells that were adhered on the PBDG-grafted substrates were much fewer and mainly round-shaped, which limited further proliferation. The PBracG-grafted substrates and untreated coverslips displayed properties that were between the above two surfaces, although the PBracG-grafted substrates were a little better than the untreated coverslips.
To examine whether the chain chirality effect was unique to the L929 cell type, we also seeded human osteosarcoma MG-63 cells onto different substrates. The results in Fig. 4 were similar to those observed with the L929 cells: both the cell adhesion and proliferation density on the PBLG-grafted substrates were larger than the others with a ranking of PBLG > PBracG > coverslip > PBDG. However, the cell roundness analysis results after culturing for 1 day didn’t show any significant difference, indicating that for the MG-63 cells a different chirality only led to a different cell adhesion density and not a different cell morphology. The cells cultured on all of the substrates had an elongated morphology at the beginning and displayed a typical cobblestone-like morphology after fusion to the monolayer, but further culture would lead to cell cluster formation especially on the coverslips. The results revealed that the cell behaviors were greatly influenced by the chain chirality of the surface-grafted polypeptide brushes. The PBLG brushes are composed of L-type monomers, which could mimic the chirality of natural peptides/proteins, and could enhance cell adhesion and proliferation. In contrast, the PBDG brushes with a left-handed conformation showed different effects. Thus, the different cell behaviors on the polypeptide brush grafted surfaces were regulated by the chain chirality of the polypeptides, which could be recognized and distinguished by the cells.
The chirality of the culture substrates is recognized by cells via stereospecific interactions between the chiral molecules and various cell surface proteins.15,26,27 Interactions with different chiral molecules may induce different cell signals and result in different cell adhesion and proliferation behaviors. Especially for the polypeptide brush grafted substrates studied in this work, the difference in the chirality originated from the secondary structure of the polypeptide brushes, which is related to the important participant proteins in biological systems. The unfavourable conformation related hydrophobic or hydrogen bonding interactions between the cell surface protein and D-type polypeptide may be responsible for the low cell adhesion and proliferation density.26 Moreover, the stereospecific interaction between the cells and chiral polypeptide brush grafted surfaces is a common effect that could be used for different cells. Thus, it could be considered that the design of chiral polypeptide brushes may be applicable for the precise design of polypeptide-related biomaterials, which could be further combined to tune cell behaviors in tissue engineering.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: XPS, AFM and water contact angle data. See DOI: 10.1039/c6qm00200e |
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