4.6 Article

Differential Behavior of Normal and Fibrotic Fibroblasts under the Synergistic Influence of Micropillar Topography and the Rigidity of Honey/Silk-Fibroin Substrates

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 2, Issue 9, Pages 1528-1539

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.6b00292

Keywords

micropillar topography; mechanical stiffness; soft lithography; primary fibroblasts; differential response; therapeutic patches

Funding

  1. Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur (India) [IIT/SRIC/R/NIC/2014/70]
  2. MHRD, Government of India, New Delhi (India) [IIT/SRIC/R/NIC/2014/70]

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We report differential proliferation behavior of normal and fibrosis associated human oral fibroblasts on micropillar honey embedded silk fibroin substrates (HSF). Oral fibroblasts of different origins manifest differences in proliferation rate, morphology, and the cytoskeletal arrangement on HSF substrates with distinct topography (H, D, and S), stiffness, and honey concentration. It is observed that the proliferation rate is maximized for normal and inhibited for fibrosis associated fibroblasts on a HSF substrate surface with moderate height of similar to 8.5 mu m and 2% honey concentration. Molecular expression analysis reveals decrease in c-myc and p53 expression in later cells validating the inhibition of their proliferation rate, which is further correlated with the decreased Col I and Col III expression on this substrate. A substrate with enhanced interspacing and intermediate mechanical stiffness (0.57 +/- 0.32 mu N/nm) favors strong adhesion and stable cell matrix interaction for normal cells, while exhibiting negative influence on fibrotic fibroblasts with poor adhesion and spreading capability. Decrease in vimentin, fibronectin expression, and cytoskeleton reorganization justify the poor stability of later cells on the optimized substrate, thereby allowing selective modulation of normal and fibrosis associated fibroblasts under the synergistic influence of honey concentration, topography, and rigidity of HSF substrates. The work highlights the possible therapeutic efficacy of honey based micropatterned substrates as smart patches for fast wound healing and in minimizing the chances of recurrence of precancer post oral tumor resection surgeries.

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