Issue 22, 2017, Issue in Progress

Selective adhesive cell capture without molecular specificity: new surfaces exploiting nanoscopic polycationic features as discrete adhesive units

Abstract

This work explored how molecularly non-specific polycationic nanoscale features on a collecting surface control kinetic and selectivity aspects of mammalian cell capture. Key principles for selective collector design were demonstrated by comparing the capture of two closely related breast cancer cell lines: MCF-7 and TMX2-28. TMX2-28 is a tamoxifen-selected clone of MCF-7. The collector was a silica surface, negatively-charged at pH 7.4, containing isolated molecules (∼8 nm diameter) of the cationic polymer, poly(dimethyl-aminoethylmethacrylate), pDMAEMA. Important in this work is the non-selective nature of the pDMAEMA interactions with cells: pDMAEMA generally adheres negatively charged particles and cells in solution. We show here that selectivity towards cells results from collector design: this includes competition between repulsive interactions involving the negative silica and attractions to the immobilized pDMAEMA molecules, the random pDMAEMA arrangement on the surface, and the concentration of positive charge in the vicinity of the adsorbed pDMAEMA chains. The latter act as nanoscopic cationic surface patches, each weakly attracted to negatively-charged cells. Collecting surfaces engineered with an appropriate amount pDMAEMA, exposed to mixtures of MCF-7 and TMX2-28 cells preferentially captured TMX2-28 with a selectivity of 2.5. (This means that the ratio of TMX2-28 to MCF cells on the surface was 2.5 times their compositional ratio in free solution.) The ionic strength-dependence of cell capture was shown to be similar to that of silica microparticles on the same surfaces. This suggests that the mechanism of selective cell capture involves nanoscopic differences in the contact areas of the cells with the collector, allowing discrimination of closely related cell line-based small scale features of the cell surface. This work demonstrated that even without molecular specificity, selectivity for physical cell attributes produces adhesive discrimination.

Graphical abstract: Selective adhesive cell capture without molecular specificity: new surfaces exploiting nanoscopic polycationic features as discrete adhesive units

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Jan 2017
Accepted
14 Feb 2017
First published
28 Feb 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2017,7, 13416-13425

Selective adhesive cell capture without molecular specificity: new surfaces exploiting nanoscopic polycationic features as discrete adhesive units

S. Kalasin, E. P. Browne, K. F. Arcaro and M. M. Santore, RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 13416 DOI: 10.1039/C7RA01217A

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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