Title
Bombyx mori silk fibroin membranes as potential substrata for epithelial constructs used in the management of ocular surface disorders
Authors
Chirila T, Barnard Z, Zainuddin, Harkin DG, Schwab IR, Hirst L.
Institution
Queensland Eye Institute, Brisbane
Country
Australia
Year
2008
Journal
Journal of Investigative Dermatology
Abstract
Membranes were prepared from fibroin, a protein isolated from the domesticated silkworm (Bombyx mori) silk, and evaluated as a potential substratum for corneal limbal epithelial cells. These membranes (i.e., B. mori silk fibroin [BMSF] membranes) were cast from dialyzed solutions of fibroin protein (4% w/v) dispensed into 35-mm-diameter culture dishes and dried at room temperature (23-24 degrees C). The resulting material was transparent, easy to handle, and supported levels of human limbal epithelial (HLE) cell growth comparable to that observed on tissue culture plastic. Remarkably, these results were obtained utilizing a commercial serum-free medium (CnT-20) designed for the ex vivo expansion of corneal epithelial progenitor cells. The potential benefits of serum proteins on this culture system were examined through addition of fetal bovine serum (FBS) either to fibroin stocks prior to membrane casting or by supplementation of the CnT-20 medium. Membranes cast in the presence of FBS displayed increasing opacity and induced little change in HLE growth. Supplementation of CnT-20 medium with FBS deterred cell growth on all substrata, including tissue culture plastic control substrata. The remarkable properties of BMSF membranes demonstrated under serum-free conditions warrant investigation of this material as a substratum in the creation of tissue-engineered constructs for the restoration of diseased or damaged ocular surface.
Product use
Isolation and cultivation for cell growth assay. "Supplementation of CnT-20 medium with FBS deterred cell growth on all substrata, including tissue culture plastic control substrata." "Clearly, the medium chosen for our study, CnT-20, should not be supple
Tissue type
Corneal
Tissue info
Donor corneoscleral rims
Species
Human
CELLnTEC Previous products
CnT-20

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