Group photo of the Dynamic Biomaterials team in front of the entrance to INM; the team members are moving together toward the camera

Dynamic Biomaterials

We study and orchestrate how synthetic materials interact with living cells. We engineer cell-instructive environments and material-based solutions for zero-waste therapeutic solutions

Our group develops hydrogel materials with programmed and tunable properties designed to encapsulate and instruct living cells. We study how living cells and inert matter interact and how these interactions can be exploited to direct cellular functions and ultimately result in therapeutic advantages. We cooperate with synthetic biologists, biophysicists, drug developers and clinicians to explore the application potential of our developments, with a focus on new materials for ophthalmic drug delivery. We contribute to INM’s competence fields opto-interactive and bio-intelligent materials. Our research addresses biomedical needs.

Prof. Dr. Aránzazu del Campo
Prof. Dr. Aránzazu del Campo
Head of Dynamic Biomaterials
Telefon: +49 (0)681-9300-510

Contact

Dr. Aleeza Farrukh
Stv. Leiterin Dynamische Biomaterialien
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-315
Martina Bonnard
Secretary
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-397
Team Members
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-351
E-mail: Israa.Abdulrahman@leibniz-inm.de
Apprentice Chemical Lab Technician
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-181
E-mail: Daniel.Ablahad@leibniz-inm.de
Technician
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-363
E-mail: Britta.Abt@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-157
E-mail: Sener.Albayrak@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-315
E-mail: gerardo.asensiomartin@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-245
E-mail: stefan.brueck@leibniz-inm.de
Research Assistant
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-108/251
E-mail: jesus.chong@leibniz-inm.de
Apprentice Chemical Lab Technician
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-414
E-mail: semhar.eyob@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-360
E-mail: Usama.Farrukh@leibniz-inm.de
Stv. Leiterin Dynamische Biomaterialien
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-315
E-mail: aleeza.farrukh@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-214
E-mail: jun.feng@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
E-mail: annalena.frank@leibniz-inm.de
Research Assistant
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-245
E-mail: daniel.sanchez@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-384
E-mail: Hannah.Jahn-Kelleter@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-345
E-mail: Jennifer.Kasper@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-349
E-mail: mokhamad.khamdan@leibniz-inm.de
Transfer Agent
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-401
E-mail: steffen.krauser@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-316
E-mail: rinku.kumar@leibniz-inm.de
Visiting Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-155
E-mail: juan.mancebo@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-247
E-mail: joelle.mekontso@leibniz-inm.de
Research Scientist
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-315
E-mail: christian.mueller@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-214
E-mail: Ann-Cathrin.Schlapp@leibniz-inm.de
Technician
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-363
E-mail: silke.siegrist@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-384
E-mail: therese.steudter@leibniz-inm.de
Doctoral Student
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-282
E-mail: LaraLuana.TeruelEnrico@leibniz-inm.de
Technician
Phone: +49 (0)681-9300-152
E-mail: lennart.weismantel@leibniz-inm.de
Research

Hydrogels with latent properties

By integrating phototriggers and light-responsive molecular motors in polymeric networks, we develop 4D hydrogels with optoregulated (bio)chemical activity, crosslinking, degradation, or mechanoactuation. These are used for biophysical studies of cell response to changes in the biochemical and mechanical signals of the extracellular environment.

Schematic illustration of a three-dimensional hydrogel network with embedded light-responsive components used to control chemical and mechanical properties.
Schematic illustration of an automated pipetting system dispensing material samples into a microplate; the enlarged sequence shows different layered cellular microenvironments for high-throughput experiments.

Model Cellular Microenvironments

We build synthetic models of cell-matrix and cell-cell interfaces with encoded biochemical, mechanical and dimensional signals. To accelerate discovery, we develop material microarrays for high-throughput biophysical experimentation and apply them to study multifactorial cell responses.

Living Therapeutic Devices

We develop bioinks and apply biofabrication technologies for functional and safe encapsulation of cells in medical devices. We focus on self-replenishable living therapeutic materials which integrate drug biofactories and have unlimited therapeutic release. We aim for innovation in ocular therapeutics with living, self-replenishable drug-eluting contact lenses.

Schematic illustration of a biofabrication process: a cell-containing material is delivered from a reservoir through a nozzle into a tubular structure that releases therapeutic agents.
Partner
Logo and wordmark of the Collaborative Research Center CRC / SFB 1027.

Selected Publications

2017
Cell Adhesion on Dynamic Supramolecular Surfaces Probed by Fluid Force Microscopy-Based Single-Cell Force Spectroscopy

Sankaran, Shrikrishnan | Jaatinen, Leena | Brinkmann, Jenny | Zambelli, Tomaso | Vörös, Janos | Jonkheijm, Pascal

DOI:

Biomimetic and stimuli-responsive cell-material interfaces are actively being developed to study and control various cell-dynamics phenomena. Since cells naturally reside in the highly dynamic and complex environment of the extracellular matrix, attempts are being made to replicate these conditions in synthetic biomaterials. Supramolecular chemistry, dealing with noncovalent interactions, has recently provided possibilities to incorporate such dynamicity and responsiveness in various types of architectures. Using a cucurbit[8]uril-based host–guest system, we have successfully established a dynamic and electrochemically responsive interface for the display of the integrin-specific ligand, Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD), to promote cell adhesion. Due to the weak nature of the noncovalent forces by which the components at the interface are held together, we expected that cell adhesion would also be weaker in comparison to traditional interfaces where ligands are usually immobilized by covalent linkages. To assess the stability and limitations of our noncovalent interfaces, we performed single-cell force spectroscopy studies using fluid force microscopy. This technique enabled us to measure rupture forces of multiple cells that were allowed to adhere for several hours on individual substrates. We found that the rupture forces of cells adhered to both the noncovalent and covalent interfaces were nearly identical for up to several hours. We have analyzed and elucidated the reasons behind this result as a combination of factors including the weak rupture force between linear Arg-Gly-Asp and integrin, high surface density of the ligand, and increase in effective concentration of the supramolecular components under spread cells. These characteristics enable the construction of highly dynamic biointerfaces without compromising cell-adhesive properties.

DOI:

ACS Nano ,
2017, 11 (4), 3867-3874.

OPEN ACCESS
Stacked-Layer Heterostructure Films of 2D Thiophene Nanosheets and Graphene for High-Rate All-Solid-State Pseudocapacitors with Enhanced Volumetric Capacitance

Wu, Zhong-Shuai | Zheng, Yijun | Zheng, Shuanghao | Wang, Sen | Sun, Chenglin | Parvez, Khaled | Ikeda, Taichi | Bao, Xinhe | Müllen, Klaus | Feng, Xinliang

DOI:

Stacked-layer heterostructure films of 2D thiophene nanosheets and electrochemically exfoliated graphene are constructed for ultrahigh-rate all-solid-state flexible pseudocapacitors and micro-supercapacitors with superior volumetric capacitance due to the synergetic effect of the ultrathin pseudocapacitive thiophene nanosheets and the capacitive electrochemically exfoliated graphene.

DOI:

Advanced Materials ,
2017, 29 (3), 1602960, 1-7.

Hybrid Surface Patterns Mimicking the Design of the Adhesive Toe Pad of Tree Frog

Xue, Longjian | Sanz, Belén | Luo, Aoyi | Turner, Kevin T. | Wang, Xin | Tan, Di | Zhang, Rui | Du, Hang | Steinhart, Martin | Mijangos, Carmen | Guttmann, Markus | Kappl, Michael | del Campo, Aránzazu

DOI:

Biological materials achieve directional reinforcement with oriented assemblies of anisotropic building blocks. One such example is the nanocomposite structure of keratinized epithelium on the toe pad of tree frogs, in which hexagonal arrays of (soft) epithelial cells are crossed by densely packed and oriented (hard) keratin nanofibrils. Here, a method is established to fabricate arrays of tree-frog-inspired composite micropatterns composed of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) micropillars embedded with polystyrene (PS) nanopillars. Adhesive and frictional studies of these synthetic materials reveal a benefit of the hierarchical and anisotropic design for both adhesion and friction, in particular, at high matrix–fiber interfacial strengths. The presence of PS nanopillars alters the stress distribution at the contact interface of micropillars and therefore enhances the adhesion and friction of the composite micropattern. The results suggest a design principle for bioinspired structural adhesives, especially for wet environments.

DOI:

ACS Nano ,
2017, 11 (10), 9711-9719.

OPEN ACCESS
3D bioprinting of structural proteins

Włodarczyk-Biegun, Małgorzata K. | del Campo, Aránzazu

DOI:

3D bioprinting is a booming method to obtain scaffolds of different materials with predesigned and customized morphologies and geometries. In this review we focus on the experimental strategies and recent achievements in the bioprinting of major structural proteins (collagen, silk, fibrin), as a particularly interesting technology to reconstruct the biochemical and biophysical composition and hierarchical morphology of natural scaffolds. The flexibility in molecular design offered by structural proteins, combined with the flexibility in mixing, deposition, and mechanical processing inherent to bioprinting technologies, enables the fabrication of highly functional scaffolds and tissue mimics with a degree of complexity and organization which has only just started to be explored. Here we describe the printing parameters and physical (mechanical) properties of bioinks based on structural proteins, including the biological function of the printed scaffolds. We describe applied printing techniques and cross-linking methods, highlighting the modifications implemented to improve scaffold properties. The used cell types, cell viability, and possible construct applications are also reported. We envision that the application of printing technologies to structural proteins will enable unprecedented control over their supramolecular organization, conferring printed scaffolds biological properties and functions close to natural systems.

DOI:

Biomaterials ,
2017, 134 180-201.

2016
Bioconjugating thiols to poly(acrylamide) gels for cell culture using methylsulfonyl co-monomers

Farrukh, Aleeza | Paez, Julieta I. | Salierno, Marcelo | del Campo, Aránzazu

DOI:

Poly(acrylamide) P(AAm) gels have become relevant model substrates to study cell response to the mechanical and biochemical properties of the cellular microenvironment. However, current bioconjugation strategies to functionalize P(AAm) gels, mainly using photoinduced arylazide coupling, show poor specificity and hinder conclusive studies of material properties and cellular responses. We describe methylsulfonyl-containing P(AAm) hydrogels for cell culture. These gels allow easy, specific and functional covalent coupling of thiol containing bioligands in tunable concentrations under physiological conditions, while retaining the same swelling, porosity, cytocompatibility, and low protein adsorption of P(AAm) gels. These materials allow quantitative and standardized studies of cell-materials interactions with P(AAm) gels.

DOI:

Angewandte Chemie-International Edition ,
2016, 55 (6), 2092-2096.

Monitoring the contact stress distribution of gecko-inspired adhesives using mechano-sensitive surface coatings

Neubauer, Jens Werner | Xue, Longjian | Erath, Johann | Drotlef, Dirk M. | del Campo, Aranzazu | Fery, Andreas

DOI:

The contact geometry of microstructured adhesive surfaces is of high relevance for adhesion enhancement. Theoretical considerations indicate that the stress distribution in the contact zone is crucial for the detachment mechanism, but direct experimental evidence is missing so far. In this work, we propose a method that allows, for the first time, the detection of local stresses at the contact area of biomimetic adhesive microstructures during contact formation, compression and detachment. We use a mechano-sensitive polymeric layer, which turns mechanical stresses into changes of fluorescence intensity. The biomimetic surface is brought into contact with this layer in a well-defined fashion using a micro-contact printer, while the contact area is monitored with fluorescence microscopy in situ. Thus, changes in stress distribution across the contact area during compression and pull-off can be visualized with a lateral resolution of 1 μm. We apply this method to study the enhanced adhesive performance of T-shaped micropillars, compared to flat punch microstructures. We find significant differences in the stress distribution of the both differing contact geometries during pull-off. In particular, we find direct evidence for the suppression of crack nucleation at the edge of T-shaped pillars, which confirms theoretical models for the superior adhesive properties of these structures.

DOI:

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces ,
2016, 8 (28), 17870-17877.

Guiding cell migration with microscale stiffness patterns and undulated surfaces

Pham, Jonathan T. | Xue, Longjian | del Campo, Aránzazu | Salierno, Marcelo

DOI:

By placing stiff structures under soft materials, prior studies have demonstrated that cells sense and prefer to position themselves over the stiff structures. However, an understanding of how cells migrate on such surfaces has not been established. Many studies have also shown that cells readily align to surface topography. Here we investigate the influence of these two aspects in directing cell migration on surfaces with 5 and 10 μm line stiffness patterns (a cellular to subcellular length scale). A simple approach to create flat, stiffness-patterned surfaces by suspending a thin, low modulus polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) film over a high modulus PDMS structure is presented, as well as a route to add undulations. We confirm that cells are able to sense through the thin film by observation of focal adhesions being positioned on stiff regions. We examine migration by introducing migration efficiency, a quantitative parameter to determine how strongly cells migrate in a certain direction. We found that cells have a preference to align and migrate along stiffness patterns while the addition of undulations boosts this effect, significantly increasing migration efficiency in either case. Interestingly, we found speed to play little role in the migration efficiency and to be mainly influenced by the top layer modulus. Our results demonstrate that both stiffness patterns and surface undulations are important considerations when investigating the interactions of cells with biomaterial surfaces. Statement of Significance: Two common physical considerations for cell-surface interactions include patterned stiffness and patterned topography. However, their relative influences on cell migration behavior have not been established, particularly on cellular to subcellular scale patterns. For stiffness patterning, it has been recently shown that cells tend to position themselves over a stiff structure that is placed under a thin soft layer. By quantifying the directional migration efficiency on such surfaces with and without undulations, we show that migration can be manipulated by flat stiffness patterns, although surface undulations also play a strong role. Our results offer insight on the effect of cellular scale stiffness and topographical patterns on cell migration, which is critical for the development of fundamental cell studies and engineered implants.

DOI:

Acta Biomaterialia ,
2016, 38 106-115.

Phototriggered fibril-like environments arbitrate cell escapes and migration from endothelial monolayers

Salierno, Marcelo J. | García-Fernandez, Luis | Carabelos, Noelia | Kiefer, Karin | García, Andrés J. | del Campo, Aránzazu

DOI:

Cell detachment and migration from the endothelium occurs during vasculogenesis and also in pathological states. Here, we use a novel approach to trigger single cell release from an endothelial monolayer by in-situ opening of adhesive, fibril-like environment using light-responsive ligands and scanning lasers. Cell escapes from the monolayer were observed on the fibril-like adhesive tracks with 3-15 μm width. The frequency of endothelial cell escapes increased monotonically with the fibril width and with the density of the light-activated adhesive ligand. Interestingly, treatment with VEGF induced cohesiveness within the cell layer, preventing cell leaks. When migrating through the tracks, cells presented body lateral reduction and nuclear deformation imposed by the line width and dependent on myosin contractility. Cell migration mode changed from mesenchymal to amoeboid-like when the adhesive tracks narrowed (≤5 μm). Moreover, cell nucleus was shrunk showing packed DNA on lines narrower than the nuclear dimensions in a mechanisms intimately associated with the stress fibers. This platform allows the detailed study of escapes and migratory transitions of cohesive cells, which are relevant processes in development and during diseases such as organ fibrosis and carcinomas.

DOI:

Biomaterials ,
2016, 82 113-123.

Stick-slip friction of PDMS surfaces for bioinspired adhesives

Xue, Longjian | Pham, Jonathan T. | Iturri, Jagoba | del Campo, Aránzazu

DOI:

Friction plays an important role in the adhesion of many climbing organisms, such as the gecko. During the shearing between two surfaces, periodic stick-slip behavior is often observed and may be critical to the adhesion of gecko setae and gecko-inspired adhesives. Here, we investigate the influence of short oligomers and pendent chains on the stick-slip friction of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), a commonly used material for bioinspired adhesives. Three different stick-slip patterns were observed on these surfaces (flat or microstructured) depending on the presence or absence of oligomers and their ability to diffuse out of the material. After washing samples to remove any untethered oligomeric chains, or after oxygen plasma treatment to convert the surface to a thin layer of silica, we decouple the contributions of stiffness, oligomers, and pendant chains to the stick?slip behavior. The stick phase is mainly controlled by the stiffness while the amount of untethered oligomers and pendant chains available at the contact interface defines the slip phase. A large amount of oligomers and pendant chains resulted in a large slip time, dominating the period of stick-slip motion.

DOI:

Langmuir ,
2016, 32 (10), 2428-2435.

Surface modification by plasma etching impairs early vascularization and tissue incorporation of porous polyethylene (Medpor®) implants

Laschke, Matthias W. | Augustin, Victor A. | Sahin, Fadime | Anschütz, Dieter | Metzger, Wolfgang | Scheuer, Claudia | Bischoff, Markus | Aktas, Oral C. | Menger, Michael D.

DOI:

Porous polyethylene (Medpor®) is commonly used in craniofacial reconstructive surgery. Rapid vascularization and tissue incorporation are crucial for the prevention of migration, extrusion, and infection of the biomaterial. Therefore, we analyzed whether surface modification by plasma etching may improve the early tissue response to Medpor®. Medpor® samples were treated in a plasma chamber at low (20 W; LE-PE) and high energy levels (40 W; HE-PE). The samples and non-treated controls were implanted into mouse dorsal skinfold chambers to analyze angiogenesis, inflammation, and granulation tissue formation over 14 days using intravital fluorescence microscopy, histology, and immunohistochemistry. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analyses revealed that elevating energy levels of plasma etching progressively increase the oxygen surface content and surface roughness of Medpor®. This did not affect the leukocytic response to the implants. However, LE-PE and HE-PE samples exhibited an impaired vascularization. This was associated with a reduced formation of a collagen-rich granulation tissue at the implantation site. Additional in vitro experiments showed a reduced cell attachment on plasma-etched Medpor®. Thus, plasma etching may not be recommended to improve the clinical outcome of reconstructive interventions using Medpor®. However, it may be beneficial for temporarily implanted polyethylene-based biomedical devices for which tissue incorporation is undesirable.

DOI:

Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B: Applied Biomaterials ,
2016, 104 (8), 1738-1748.