Regulated Behavior
in Living Cells with Highly Aligned
Configurations on Nanowrinkled Graphene Oxide Substrates: Deep Learning
Based on Interplay of Cellular Contact Guidance
posted on 2023-12-15, 13:40authored byRowoon Park, Moon Sung Kang, Gyeonghwa Heo, Yong Cheol Shin, Dong-Wook Han, Suck Won Hong
Micro-/nanotopographical cues have
emerged as a practical
and promising
strategy for controlling cell fate and reprogramming, which play a
key role as biophysical regulators in diverse cellular processes and
behaviors. Extracellular biophysical factors can trigger intracellular
physiological signaling via mechanotransduction and promote cellular
responses such as cell adhesion, migration, proliferation, gene/protein
expression, and differentiation. Here, we engineered a highly ordered
nanowrinkled graphene oxide (GO) surface via the mechanical deformation
of an ultrathin GO film on an elastomeric substrate to observe specific
cellular responses based on surface-mediated topographical cues. The
ultrathin GO film on the uniaxially prestrained elastomeric substrate
through self-assembly and subsequent compressive force produced GO
nanowrinkles with periodic amplitude. To examine the acute cellular
behaviors on the GO-based cell interface with nanostructured arrays
of wrinkles, we cultured L929 fibroblasts and HT22 hippocampal neuronal
cells. As a result, our developed cell-culture substrate obviously
provided a directional guidance effect. In addition, based on the
observed results, we adapted a deep learning (DL)-based data processing
technique to precisely interpret the cell behaviors on the nanowrinkled
GO surfaces. According to the learning/transfer learning protocol
of the DL network, we detected cell boundaries, elongation, and orientation
and quantitatively evaluated cell velocity, traveling distance, displacement,
and orientation. The presented experimental results have intriguing
implications such that the nanotopographical microenvironment could
engineer the living cells’ morphological polarization to assemble
them into useful tissue chips consisting of multiple cell types.