4.8 Article

Injection Molded Polymeric Micropatterns for Bone Regeneration Study

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 13, Pages 7273-7281

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b00481

Keywords

polystyrene micropatterns; microinjection molding; stem cells; hybrid sol-gel system; osteogenesis of hMSCs

Funding

  1. CARIPLO
  2. Italian Ministry of Health [RP-2009-1528187]

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An industrially feasible process for the fast mass-production of molded polymeric micro-patterned substrates is here presented. Microstructured polystyrene (PS) surfaces were obtained through micro injection molding (mu IM) technique on directly patterned stamps realized with a new zirconia-based hybrid spin-on system able to withstand 300 cycles at 90 degrees C. The use of directly patterned stamps entails a great advantage on the overall manufacturing process as it allows a fast, flexible, and simple one-step process with respect to the use of milling, laser machining, electroforming techniques, or conventional lithographic processes for stamp fabrication. Among the different obtainable geometries, we focused our attention on PS replicas reporting 2, 3, and 4 mu m diameter pillars with 8, 9, 10 mu m center-to-center distance, respectively. This enabled us to study the effect of the substrate topography on human mesenchymal stem cells behavior without any osteogenic growth factors. Our data show that microtopography affected cell behavior. In particular, calcium deposition and osteocalcin expression enhanced as diameter and interpillar distance size increases, and the 4-10 surface was the most effective to induce osteogenic differentiation.

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