Journal article
The Role of Surface Nanotopography and Chemistry on Primary Neutrophil and Macrophage Cellular Responses
SN Christo, A Bachhuka, KR Diener, A Mierczynska, JD Hayball, K Vasilev
Advanced Healthcare Materials | WILEY-BLACKWELL | Published : 2016
Abstract
Synthetic materials employed for enhancing, replacing, or restoring biological functionality may be compromised by the host immune responses that they evoke. Surface modification has attracted substantial attention as a tool to modulate the host response to synthetic materials; however, how surface nanotopography combined with chemistry affects immune effector cell responses is still poorly understood. To address this open question, a unique set of model surfaces with controlled surface nanotopography in the range of 16, 38, and 68 nm has been generated. Tailored outermost surface chemistry that was amine, carboxyl, or methyl group rich has been provided. The combinations of these properties..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
S.N.C. and A.B. contributed equally to this work. This project was supported in part by project grants NHMRC PG631931 and ARC DP15104212 (both to J.D.H. and K.V.).