4.5 Article

Adhesion, spreading and osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells cultured on micropatterned amorphous diamond, titanium, tantalum and chromium coatings on silicon

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10856-009-3836-8

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  1. Finska Lakaresallskapet
  2. National Graduate School of Musculoskeletal Diseases and Biomaterials
  3. NMT ERA Net
  4. MATERA
  5. ESF
  6. TEKES
  7. EVO
  8. Sigrid Juselius Foundation

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It was hypothesized that human mesenchymal stromal cell (hMSC) can be guided by patterned and plain amorphous diamond (AD), titanium (Ti), tantalum (Ta) and chromium (Cr) coatings, produced on silicon wafer using physical vapour deposition and photolithography. At 7.5 h hMSCs density was 3.0-3.5x higher (P < 0.0003, except Ti) and cells were smaller (68 vs. 102 mu m, P 0.000006-0.02) on patterns than on silicon background. HMSC-covered surface of the background silicon was lower on Ti than AD patterns (P = 0.015), but at 5 days this had reversed (P = 0.006). At 7.5 h focal vinculin adhesions and actin cytoskeleton were outgoing from pattern edges so cells assumed geometric square shapes. Patterns allowed induced osteogenesis, but less effectively than plain surfaces, except for AD, which could be used to avoid osseointegration. All these biomaterial patterns exert direct early, intermediate and late guidance on hMSCs and osteogenic differentiation, but indirect interactions exist with cells on silicon background.

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