Peptide Nanofiber Substrates for Long-Term Culturing of Primary Neurons
Neurons
0301 basic medicine
03 medical and health sciences
Neural Stem Cells
Nanofibers
Polylysine
Peptides
Cells, Cultured
DOI:
10.1021/acsami.8b07560
Publication Date:
2018-07-06T18:04:32Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
The culturing of primary neurons represents a central pillar of neuroscience research. Primary neurons are derived directly from brain tissue and recapitulate key aspects of neuronal development in an in vitro setting. Unlike neural stem cells, primary neurons do not divide; thus, initial attachment of cells to a suitable substrate is critical. Commonly used polylysine substrates can suffer from batch variability owing to their polymeric nature. Herein, we report the use of chemically well-defined, self-assembling tetrapeptides as substrates for primary neuronal culture. These water-soluble peptides assemble into fibers which facilitate adhesion and development of primary neurons, their long-term survival (>40 days), synaptic maturation, and electrical activity. Furthermore, these substrates are permissive toward neuronal transfection and transduction which, coupled with their uniformity and reproducible nature, make them suitable for a wide variety of applications in neuroscience.
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