posted on 2018-07-24, 00:00authored byAlycia Abbott, Leif Oxburgh, David L. Kaplan, Jeannine M. Coburn
Silk fibroin biomaterials
are highly versatile in terms of materials formation and functionalization,
with applications in tissue engineering and drug delivery, but necessitate
modifications for optimized biological activity. Herein, a facile,
avidin-based technique is developed to noncovalently functionalize
silk materials with bioactive molecules. The ability to adsorb avidin
to silk surfaces and subsequently couple biotinylated macromolecules
via avidin–biotin interaction is described. This method better
preserved functionality than standard covalent coupling techniques
using carbodiimide cross-linking chemistry. The controlled release
of avidin from the silk surface was demonstrated by altering the adsorption
parameters. Application of this technique to culturing human foreskin
fibroblasts (hFFs) and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) on arginine-glycine-aspartic-acid-modified
(RGD-modified) silk showed increased cell growth over a seven-day
period. This technique provides a facile method for the versatile
functionalization of silk materials for biomedical applications including
tissue engineering, drug delivery, and biological sensing.