posted on 2022-03-11, 16:42authored byCaterina Tomba, Camille Migdal, David Fuard, Catherine Villard, Alice Nicolas
Brain
tissues demonstrate heterogeneous mechanical properties,
which evolve with aging and pathologies. The observation in these
tissues of smooth to sharp rigidity gradients raises the question
of brain cell responses to both different values of rigidity and their
spatial variations, in dependence on the surface chemistry they are
exposed to. Here, we used recent techniques of hydrogel photopolymerization
to achieve stiffness texturing down to micrometer resolution in polyacrylamide
hydrogels. We investigated primary neuron adhesion and orientation
as well as glial cell proliferative properties on these rigidity-textured
hydrogels for two adhesive coatings: fibronectin or poly-l-lysine/laminin. Our main observation is that glial cell adhesion
and proliferation is favored on the stiffer regions when the adhesive
coating is fibronectin and on the softer ones when it consists of
poly-l-lysine/laminin. This behavior was unchanged by the
presence or the absence of neuronal cells. In addition, glial cells
were not confined by sharp, micron-scaled gradients of rigidity. Our
observations suggest that rigidity sensing could involve adhesion-related
pathways that profoundly depend on surface chemistry.