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DOI: 10.1088/1748-6041/10/1/015024
OpenAccess: Closed
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Surface modification of silicone tubes by functional carboxyl and amine, but not peroxide groups followed by collagen immobilization improves endothelial cell stability and functionality

Asiyeh Salehi,Ghassem Amoabediny,Mohammad Ali Shokrgozar,K. Mottaghy,Jenneke Klein‐Nulend,Behrouz Zandieh-Doulabi

Amine gas treating
Surface modification
Silicone
2015
Surface modification by functional groups promotes endothelialization in biohybrid artificial lungs, but whether it affects endothelial cell stability under fluid shear stress, and the release of anti-thrombotic factors, e.g. nitric oxide (NO), is unknown. We aimed to test whether surface-modified silicone tubes containing different functional groups, but similar wettability, improve collagen immobilization, endothelialization, cell stability and cell-mediated NO-release. Peroxide, carboxyl, and amine-groups increased collagen immobilization (41–76%). Only amine-groups increased ultimate tensile strength (2-fold). Peroxide and amine enhanced (1.5–2.5 fold), but carboxyl-groups decreased (2.9-fold) endothelial cell number after 6 d. After collagen immobilization, cell numbers were enhanced by all group-modifications (2.8–3.8 fold). Cells were stable under 1 h-fluid shear stress on amine, but not carboxyl or peroxide-group-modified silicone (>50% cell detachment), while cells were also stable on carboxyl-group-modified silicone with immobilized collagen. NO-release was increased by peroxide and amine (1.1–1.7 fold), but decreased by carboxyl-group-modification (9.8-fold), while it increased by all group-modifications after collagen immobilization (1.8–2.8 fold). Only the amine-group-modification changed silicone stiffness and transparency. In conclusion, silicone-surface modification of blood-contacting parts of artificial lungs with carboxyl and amine, but not peroxide-groups followed by collagen immobilization allows the formation of a stable functional endothelial cell layer. Amine-group-modification seems undesirable since it affected silicone's physical properties.
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    Surface modification of silicone tubes by functional carboxyl and amine, but not peroxide groups followed by collagen immobilization improves endothelial cell stability and functionality” is a paper by Asiyeh Salehi Ghassem Amoabediny Mohammad Ali Shokrgozar K. Mottaghy Jenneke Klein‐Nulend Behrouz Zandieh-Doulabi published in 2015. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.