Silk fibroin processing and thrombogenic responses.

J Biomater Sci Polym Ed

Department of Materials Engineering and Industrial Technologies, University of Trento, Via Mesiano 77, 38100 Trento, Italy.

Published: February 2010

Silkworm-derived fibroin, which constitutes the core of the silk filament, is an attractive protein-polymer for biomedical applications. Fibroin can also be processed into a variety of 2-D and 3-D formats to match morphological and structural features to specific applications. The focus of the present research was to correlate the structure of silk fibroin-derived biomaterials with plasma protein adsorption, platelet activation and inflammatory cell (THP-1 cell line) adhesion and activation. The amino-acid composition of the two types of silk studied influenced the crystallinity of the films, hydrophobicity, surface roughness and biological interactions. Protein adsorption was lower on samples with the higher crystallinity and hydrophobicity, in particular the chemotactic factors (C3a, C5a, C3b), while other proteins such as fibrinogen were comparable in terms of adsorption. As a consequence, platelets and immune cells responded differently to the various films obtained by following different processing protocols and stabilized by different methods (methanol or water vapour) in terms of their adherence, activation, and the secretion of inflammatory mediators by monocytes. The data presented here demonstrate that bioactivity can be influenced by changing the chemistry, such as the source of silk protein, or by the specific process used in the preparation of the materials used to assess biological responses.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156856208X399936DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

protein adsorption
8
silk
5
silk fibroin
4
fibroin processing
4
processing thrombogenic
4
thrombogenic responses
4
responses silkworm-derived
4
silkworm-derived fibroin
4
fibroin constitutes
4
constitutes core
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!