A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

A Supramolecular Platform for the Introduction of Fc-Fusion Bioactive Proteins on Biomaterial Surfaces




AuthorsPutti M, de Jong SMJ, Stassen OMJA, Sahlgren CM, Dankers PYW

PublisherAMER CHEMICAL SOC

Publishing placeWashington

Publication year2019

JournalACS Applied Polymer Materials

Journal name in sourceACS APPLIED POLYMER MATERIALS

Journal acronymACS APPL POLYM MATER

Volume1

Issue8

First page 2044

Last page2054

Number of pages21

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1021/acsapm.9b00334


Abstract
Bioorthogonal chemistry is an excellent method for functionalization of biomaterials with bioactive molecules, as it allows for decoupling of material processing and bioactivation. Here, we report on a modular system created by means of tetrazine/trans-cyclooctene (Tz/TCO) click chemistry undergoing an inverse electron demand Diels-Alder cycloaddition. A reactive supramolecular surface based on ureido-pyrimidinones (UPy) is generated via a UPy-Tz additive, in order to introduce a versatile TCO-protein G conjugate for immobilization of Fc-fusion proteins. As a model bioactive protein, we introduced FcJagged1, a Notch ligand, to induce Notch signaling activity on the material. Interestingly, HEK293 FLN1 cells expressing the Notch1 receptor were repelled by films modified with TCO-protein G but adhered and spread on functionalized electrospun meshes. This indicates that the material processing method influences the biocompatibility of the postmodification. Notch signaling activity was upregulated 5.6-fold with respect to inactive controls on electrospun materials modified with TCO-protein G/Fc-Jagged1. Furthermore, downstream effects of Notch signaling were detected on the gene level in vascular smooth muscle cells expressing the Notch3 receptor. Taken together, our results demonstrate the successful use of a modular supramolecular system for the postprocessing modification of solid materials with functional proteins.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:09