Surface Coatings Modulate the Differences in the Adhesion Forces of Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cells as Detected by Single Cell Force Microscopy

Joint Authors

Wysotzki, Philipp
Gimsa, Jan

Source

International Journal of Biomaterials

Issue

Vol. 2019, Issue 2019 (31 Dec. 2019), pp.1-12, 12 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2019-04-01

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

12

Main Subjects

Medicine

Abstract EN

Single cell force microscopy was used to investigate the maximum detachment force (MDF) of primary neuronal mouse cells (PNCs), osteoblastic cells (MC3T3), and prokaryotic cells (Staphylococcus capitis subsp.

capitis) from different surfaces after contact times of 1 to 5 seconds.

Positively charged silicon nitride surfaces were coated with positively charged polyethyleneimine (PEI) or poly-D-lysine.

Laminin was used as the second coating.

PEI induced MDFs of the order of 5 to 20 nN, slightly higher than silicon nitride did.

Lower MDFs (1 to 5 nN) were detected on PEI/laminin with the lowest on PDL/laminin.

To abstract from the individual cell properties, such as size, and to obtain cell type-specific MDFs, the MDFs of each cell on the different coatings were normalized to the silicon nitride reference for the longest contact time.

The differences in MDF between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells were generally of similar dimensions, except on PDL/laminin, which discriminated against the prokaryotic cells.

We explain the lower MDFs on laminin by the spatial prevention of the electrostatic cell adhesion to the underlying polymers.

However, PEI can form long flexible loops protruding from the surface-bound layer that may span the laminin layer and easily bind to cellular surfaces and the small prokaryotic cells.

This was reflected in increased MDFs after two-second contact times on silicon nitride, whereas the two-second values were already observed after one second on PEI or PEI/laminin.

We assume that the electrostatic charge interaction with the PEI loops is more important for the initial adhesion of the smaller prokaryotic cells than for eukaryotic cells.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Wysotzki, Philipp& Gimsa, Jan. 2019. Surface Coatings Modulate the Differences in the Adhesion Forces of Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cells as Detected by Single Cell Force Microscopy. International Journal of Biomaterials،Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1158407

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Wysotzki, Philipp& Gimsa, Jan. Surface Coatings Modulate the Differences in the Adhesion Forces of Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cells as Detected by Single Cell Force Microscopy. International Journal of Biomaterials No. 2019 (2019), pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1158407

American Medical Association (AMA)

Wysotzki, Philipp& Gimsa, Jan. Surface Coatings Modulate the Differences in the Adhesion Forces of Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cells as Detected by Single Cell Force Microscopy. International Journal of Biomaterials. 2019. Vol. 2019, no. 2019, pp.1-12.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1158407

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1158407