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(The FASEB Journal. 2000;14:593-602.)
© 2000 FASEB

Microfabrication of an analog of the basal lamina: biocompatible membranes with complex topographies

GEORGE D. PINS, MEHMET TONER and JEFFREY R. MORGAN1

Center for Engineering in Medicine and Surgical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and Shriners Burns Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA

1Correspondence: Shriners Hospital for Children, 51 Blossom St., Boston, MA 02114, USA. E-mail: jmorgan{at}sbi.org

A microfabrication approach was used to produce novel analogs of the basal lamina with complex topographic features. A test pattern of ridges and channels with length scales (40 to 310 µm) similar to the invaginations found in a native basal lamina was laser machined into the surface of a polyimide master chip. Negative replicates of the chip were produced using polydimethylsiloxane silicone elastomer and these replicates were used as templates for the production of thin (~21 µm) membranes of collagen or gelatin. The resulting membranes had a complex topography of ridges and channels that recapitulated the features of the master chip. To demonstrate their utility, these complex membranes were laminated to type I collagen sponges and their surfaces were seeded with cultured human epidermal keratinocytes to form a skin equivalent. The keratinocytes formed a differentiated and stratified epidermis that conformed to the features of the microfabricated membrane. The topography of the membrane influenced the differentiation of the keratinocytes because stratification was enhanced in the deeper channels. Membrane topography also controlled the gross surface features of the skin equivalent; infolds of the epidermis increased as channel depth increased. These novel microfabricated analogs of the basal lamina will help to elucidate the influence of topography on epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation and should have applications in the tissue engineering of skin equivalents as well as other basal lamina-containing tissues.—Pins, G. D., Toner, M., Morgan, J. R. Microfabrication of an analog of the basal lamina: biocompatible membranes with complex topographies.


Key Words: tissue engineering • basal lamina • dermal analog • polyimide chip




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