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Peptide modification of purified gellan gum

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posted on 2024-11-16, 09:44 authored by Cameron Ferris, Leo Stevens, Kerry J Gilmore, E Mume, Ivan Greguric, Damian Kirchmajer, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Peter in het PanhuisPeter in het Panhuis
Gellan gum (GG) is an anionic polysaccharide with potential as a biopolymer for additive manufacturing (3D-bioprinting) and tissue engineering. Previous studies have shown GG to be highly cytocompatible, but lacking specific attachment sites required for anchorage-dependent cells. In this work, we modify purified-GG polymer with a short peptide containing the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) sequence that is known to enhance integrin-mediated cell attachment. Radiolabelling of the peptide was used in optimisation of the conjugation procedure to achieve an overall efficiency of 40%. The purification of divalent cations from commercial GG samples was found to be critical for successful conjugation. Rheological studies revealed that the peptide coupling did not prevent gelation behaviour. C2C12 cells showed improved attachment on the surface of and encapsulated within RGD-GG hydrogels, differentiating to multinucleated myofibers after 5-7 days. PC12 cells showed minimal interactions with both GG and RGD-GG, with formation of cell clusters and impedance of terminal differentiation and neurite extension.

Funding

ARC Centre of Excellence - Australian Centre for Electromaterials Science

Australian Research Council

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Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Ferris, C. J., Stevens, L. R., Gilmore, K. J., Mume, E., Greguric, I., Kirchmajer, D. M., Wallace, G. G. & in het Panhuis, M. (2015). Peptide modification of purified gellan gum. Journal of Materials Chemistry B, 3 (6), 1106-1115.

Journal title

Journal of Materials Chemistry B

Volume

3

Issue

6

Pagination

1106-1115

Language

English

RIS ID

98867

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