Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, National Central University
  • 2 Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, National Central University; Department of Botany and Microbiology, King Saud University; higuchi@ncu.edu.tw
  • 3 Cathay Medical Research Institute, Cathay General Hospital; Graduate Institute of Systems Biology and Bioinformatics, National Central University
  • 4 Department of Botany and Microbiology, King Saud University
  • 5 Department of Medical Microbiology and Parasitology, Universiti Putra Malaysia
  • 6 Department of Internal Medicine, Taiwan Landseed Hospital
  • 7 Department of Zoology, Bharathiar University; Thiruvalluvar University
J Vis Exp, 2018 02 03.
PMID: 29443075 DOI: 10.3791/57314

Abstract

The effect of physical cues, such as the stiffness of biomaterials on the proliferation and differentiation of stem cells, has been investigated by several researchers. However, most of these investigators have used polyacrylamide hydrogels for stem cell culture in their studies. Therefore, their results are controversial because those results might originate from the specific characteristics of the polyacrylamide and not from the physical cue (stiffness) of the biomaterials. Here, we describe a protocol for preparing hydrogels, which are not based on polyacrylamide, where various stem, cells including human embryonic stem (ES) cells and human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, can be cultured. Hydrogels with varying stiffness were prepared from bioinert polyvinyl alcohol-co-itaconic acid (P-IA), with stiffness controlled by crosslinking degree by changing crosslinking time. The P-IA hydrogels grafted with and without oligopeptides derived from extracellular matrix were investigated as a future platform for stem cell culture and differentiation. The culture and passage of amniotic fluid stem cells, adipose-derived stem cells, human ES cells, and human iPS cells is described in detail here. The oligopeptide P-IA hydrogels showed superior performances, which were induced by their stiffness properties. This protocol reports the synthesis of the biomaterial, their surface manipulation, along with controlling the stiffness properties and finally, their impact on stem cell fate using xeno-free culture conditions. Based on recent studies, such modified substrates can act as future platforms to support and direct the fate of various stem cells line to different linkages; and further, regenerate and restore the functions of the lost organ or tissue.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.