Engineered nanotopography on electrospun microfibers alters cytokine production in polarized macrophages

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Authors
Schaub, Nicholas J.
Issue Date
2015-05
Type
Electronic thesis
Thesis
Language
ENG
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Biomedical engineering
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Abstract
The goal of this work is to engineer the surface structure of aligned, electrospun fibers known to direct axonal extension in order to alter macrophage polarization. Electrospun fibers were engineered to have nanoscale surface pits of different size and density on the surface of the fibers depending on the amount of non-solvent that was added to the electrospinning solution. Mechanical testing of electrospun fibers with nanoscale surface pits had a 60% increase in elastic modulus compared to fibers of identical chemical composition but a smooth surface topography. Primary mouse bone marrow macrophages (BMMs) were cultured on electrospun microfibers with specific nanoscale surface structures and given an inflammatory stimulus (LPS, M1), a regenerative stimulus (LPS + immune complexes, M2) or no stimulus (M0). For M1 polarized macrophages, transcription of IL-12 production (an M1 inflammatory cytokine) was reduced in one group (fibers with surface divets) compared to all other groups with different nanotopography, but protein expression was only significantly different between fibers with divets versus fibers with a large number of nanoscale pits. IL-10 production (an M2 regenerative cytokine) was not affected by any surface structures at either the RNA or protein levels. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) was not reduced for any group except for electrospun fibers with a smooth surface, and NO end products in the supernatant confirmed the changes observed at the RNA level.
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May 2015
School of Engineering
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Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY
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