High density of immobilized galactose ligand enhances hepatocyte attachment and function |
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Authors: | Yin Chao Ying Lei Zhang Peng-Chi Zhuo Ren-Xi Kang En-Tang Leong Kam W Mao Hai-Quan |
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Affiliation: | Tissue and Therapeutic Engineering Lab, Johns Hopkins Singapore, Level 5 Clinical Research Center, NUS, 10 Medical Drive, Singapore 117597. |
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Abstract: | Galactosylated surface is an attractive substrate for hepatocyte culture because of the specific interaction between the galactose ligand and the asialoglycoprotein receptor on hepatocytes. In this study, we described a scheme to achieve high density of immobilized galactose ligands on polyethylene terephthalate (PET) surface by first surface-grafting polyacrylic acid on plasma-pretreated PET film under UV irradiation, followed by conjugation of a galactose derivative (1-O-(6'-aminohexyl)-D-galactopyranoside) to the grafted polyacrylic acid chains. A high galactose density of 513 nmol/cm(2) on the PET surface was used in this study to investigate the behavior of cultured hepatocyte. This engineered substrate showed high affinity to fluorescein isothiocyanate-lectin binding. Primary rat hepatocytes, when seeded at a density of 2 x 10(5) cells/cm(2), attached to the galactosylated PET substrate at a similar efficiency compared with collagen-coated substrate. The hepatocytes spontaneously formed aggregates 1 day after cell seeding and showed better maintenance of albumin secretion and urea synthesis functions than those cultured on collagen-coated surface. |
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