Glycosaminoglycan-Binding Hydrogels Enable Mechanical Control of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Self-Renewal

TitleGlycosaminoglycan-Binding Hydrogels Enable Mechanical Control of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Self-Renewal
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsMusah, S, Morin, SA, Wrighton, PJ, Zwick, DB, Jin, S, Kiessling, LL
JournalAcs Nano
Volume6
Pagination10168-10177
Date PublishedNov
Type of ArticleArticle
ISBN Number1936-0851
Accession NumberWOS:000311521700090
Keywordsadhesion, biomaterials, culture, defined conditions, differentiation, extracellular-matrix, growth, hydrogel, human embryonic stem cells, pluripotency, YAP/TAZ, substrate mechanics, tissue engineering, glycosaminoglycans, mechanotransduction, surfaces, tissue
Abstract

Reaping the promise of human embryonic stem (hES) cells hinges on effective defined culture conditions. Efforts to identify chemically defined environments for hES cell propagation would benefit from understanding the relevant functional properties of the substratum. Biological materials are often employed as substrata, but their complexity obscures a molecular level analysis of their relevant attributes. Because the properties of hydrogels can be tuned and altered systematically, these materials can reveal the impact of substratum features on cell fate decisions. By tailoring the peptide displayed to cells and the substrate mechanical properties, a hydrogel was generated that binds hES cell surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) and functions robustly in a defined culture medium to support long-term hES cell self-renewal. A key attribute of the successful GAG-binding hydrogels is their stiffness. Only stiff substrates maintain hES cell proliferation and pluripotency. These fi!