Gradients of Substrate-Bound Laminin Orient Axonal Specification of Neurons

Little is known about the influence of substrate-bound gradients on neuronal development, since it has been difficult to fabricate gradients over the distances typically required for biological studies (a few hundred micrometers). This article demonstrates a generally applicable technique for the fa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2002-10, Vol.99 (20), p.12542-12547
Hauptverfasser: Stephan K.W. Dertinger, Jiang, Xingyu, Li, Zhiying, Murthy, Venkatesh N., Whitesides, George M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known about the influence of substrate-bound gradients on neuronal development, since it has been difficult to fabricate gradients over the distances typically required for biological studies (a few hundred micrometers). This article demonstrates a generally applicable technique for the fabrication of substrate-bound gradients of proteins with complex shapes, using laminar flows in microchannels. Gradients that range from pure laminin to pure BSA were formed in solution by using a network of microchannels, and these proteins were allowed to adsorb onto a homogeneous layer of poly-L-lysine. Rat hippocampal neurons were cultivated on these substrate-bound gradients. Analysis of optical images of these neurons showed that axon specification is oriented in the direction of increasing surface density of laminin. Linear gradients in laminin adsorbed from a gradient in solution having a slope of ∇[laminin] > about 0.06 µg (ml·μ m)-1(defined by dividing the change of concentration of laminin in solution over the distance of the gradient) orient axon specification, whereas those with ∇[laminin] < about 0.06 µg (ml·μ m)-1have no effect.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.192457199