The effect of a collagen tripeptide fragment (GER) on fibroblast adhesion and spreading depends on properties of an adhesive surface

2013 
The effect of collagen tripeptide fragment GER on the adhesion and spreading of mouse embryonic fibroblasts STO to different substrates (polystyrene plastic, poly-L-lysine, fibronectin, gelatin) has been studied. It was found that tripeptide GER was involved in fibroblast adhesion and spreading. The cell response depended both on the mode of tripeptide addition to culture medium and the substrate type. Coincubation of fibroblasts with tripeptide stimulated the cell attachment and spreading to untreated plastic and plastic coated with fibronectin or gelatin but did not change cell adhesion to immobilized poly-L-lysine. Preincubation of cells with tripeptide resulted in partial inhibition of fibroblast adhesion and spreading on fibronectin- and gelatin-coated substrata. It was shown that activation and inhibition of adhesive processes after tripeptide treating was higher on fibronectin than gelatin. The data obtained support the assumption about concerted action of tripeptide GER (activity was dependent both on the used concentration of the tripeptide and the mode of tripeptide addition to culture medium) and chemical characteristics of substrate (polymers of styrene and L-lysine, ECM proteins in native (fibronectin) or partly denatured (gelatin) form) on the cell adhesion and spreading. The main targets that GER peptide may affect during the formation of cell-substrate interactions are discussed.
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