-1::1
Simple Hit Counter
Skip to content

Products

Solutions

×
×
Sign In

EN

EN - EnglishCN - 简体中文DE - DeutschES - EspañolKR - 한국어IT - ItalianoFR - FrançaisPT - Português do BrasilPL - PolskiHE - עִבְרִיתRU - РусскийJA - 日本語TR - TürkçeAR - العربية
Sign In Start Free Trial

RESEARCH

JoVE Journal

Peer reviewed scientific video journal

Behavior
Biochemistry
Bioengineering
Biology
Cancer Research
Chemistry
Developmental Biology
View All
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

Video encyclopedia of advanced research methods

Biological Techniques
Biology
Cancer Research
Immunology
Neuroscience
Microbiology
JoVE Visualize

Visualizing science through experiment videos

EDUCATION

JoVE Core

Video textbooks for undergraduate courses

Analytical Chemistry
Anatomy and Physiology
Biology
Calculus
Cell Biology
Chemistry
Civil Engineering
Electrical Engineering
View All
JoVE Science Education

Visual demonstrations of key scientific experiments

Advanced Biology
Basic Biology
Chemistry
View All
JoVE Lab Manual

Videos of experiments for undergraduate lab courses

Biology
Chemistry

BUSINESS

JoVE Business

Video textbooks for business education

Accounting
Finance
Macroeconomics
Marketing
Microeconomics

OTHERS

JoVE Quiz

Interactive video based quizzes for formative assessments

Authors

Teaching Faculty

Librarians

K12 Schools

Biopharma

Products

RESEARCH

JoVE Journal

Peer reviewed scientific video journal

JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

Video encyclopedia of advanced research methods

JoVE Visualize

Visualizing science through experiment videos

EDUCATION

JoVE Core

Video textbooks for undergraduates

JoVE Science Education

Visual demonstrations of key scientific experiments

JoVE Lab Manual

Videos of experiments for undergraduate lab courses

BUSINESS

JoVE Business

Video textbooks for business education

OTHERS

JoVE Quiz

Interactive video based quizzes for formative assessments

Solutions

Authors
Teaching Faculty
Librarians
K12 Schools
Biopharma

Language

English

EN

English

CN

简体中文

DE

Deutsch

ES

Español

KR

한국어

IT

Italiano

FR

Français

PT

Português do Brasil

PL

Polski

HE

עִבְרִית

RU

Русский

JA

日本語

TR

Türkçe

AR

العربية

    Menu

    JoVE Journal

    Behavior

    Biochemistry

    Bioengineering

    Biology

    Cancer Research

    Chemistry

    Developmental Biology

    Engineering

    Environment

    Genetics

    Immunology and Infection

    Medicine

    Neuroscience

    Menu

    JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments

    Biological Techniques

    Biology

    Cancer Research

    Immunology

    Neuroscience

    Microbiology

    Menu

    JoVE Core

    Analytical Chemistry

    Anatomy and Physiology

    Biology

    Calculus

    Cell Biology

    Chemistry

    Civil Engineering

    Electrical Engineering

    Introduction to Psychology

    Mechanical Engineering

    Medical-Surgical Nursing

    View All

    Menu

    JoVE Science Education

    Advanced Biology

    Basic Biology

    Chemistry

    Clinical Skills

    Engineering

    Environmental Sciences

    Physics

    Psychology

    View All

    Menu

    JoVE Lab Manual

    Biology

    Chemistry

    Menu

    JoVE Business

    Accounting

    Finance

    Macroeconomics

    Marketing

    Microeconomics

Start Free Trial
Loading...
Home
JoVE Journal
Bioengineering
Nanofibrillar Basement Membrane Mimic Made of Recombinant Functionalized Spider Silk in Custom-Ma...
Nanofibrillar Basement Membrane Mimic Made of Recombinant Functionalized Spider Silk in Custom-Ma...
JoVE Journal
Bioengineering
This content is Free Access.
JoVE Journal Bioengineering
Nanofibrillar Basement Membrane Mimic Made of Recombinant Functionalized Spider Silk in Custom-Made Tissue Culture Inserts

Nanofibrillar Basement Membrane Mimic Made of Recombinant Functionalized Spider Silk in Custom-Made Tissue Culture Inserts

Full Text
1,621 Views
06:17 min
November 1, 2024

DOI: 10.3791/67116-v

Linnea Gustafsson*1,2, Savvini Gkouma*3, Alexander Jönsson4, Martin Dufva4, My Hedhammar3

1Spiber Technologies AB, 2Division of Micro and Nanosystems,KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 3Division of Protein Technology,KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 4Department of Health Technology,Technical University of Denmark

Tissue culture inserts with plastic membranes are the golden standard in cell culture labs as permeable supports to establish cell layers and models of barrier tissues. Herein, we present a simple method to replace the plastic membrane with a more biologically relevant membrane made from a recombinant functionalized spider silk protein.

Our research focuses on using the competently produced functionalized spider silk proteins to create extracellular matrix models to create more in vivo like conditions for the cells. We're hoping that by creating a more realistic condition for the cells to grow in, they will grow in the tissue-like construct just like they would inside the body, resulting in more realistic models. So the main advantage with using our FN-silk membranes instead of the commercially available plastic PET membranes is that the user gets a membrane that actually resembles the native basement membrane in terms of structure, thickness, biological composition, and elasticity.

By using a membrane that comes closer to mimicking the native basement membrane, we're able to establish more realistic in vitro tissue models. This can speed up drug discovery and further reduce the need for animal testing. We'll continue to investigate how the FN-silk membrane can further improve static in vitro tissue models, and we'll also incorporate the membrane into microfluidic chips in order to expose the cells to flow.

This way, we can further involve in vitro models towards more in vivo-like conditions. To begin, remove the FN-silk vials from the minus 80 degrees Celsius freezer and place them in dry ice for transportation, bring the vials to a biological safety cabinet and place them in a microcentrifuge tube rack. Upon thawing, pipette 550 microliters of silk solution into every second well of a 48-well plate.

Place the lid on the plate and place it inside a sterile box. Carefully transfer the box from the biological safety cabinet and leave it in ambient conditions overnight. The next day, bring the box containing the plate with the FN-silk membranes, and sterile inserts into the biological safety cabinet.

Carefully lift the plate from the box. Open the lid of the plate, and visually verify membrane formation by observing cloudiness in the wells. Using sterile tweezers, pick up one insert and guide it down onto the membrane until the handles touch the top of the well.

Once all inserts have been lowered, place the lid on the plate and return the plate to the sterile box. Allow the membranes to adhere to the inserts for two hours. Next, remove the plate from the box and open the lid.

Using sterile tweezers, remove the insert from the well. Fill the insert with 100 microliters of DMEM/F12 for basal seeding, or 200 microliters for apical seeding. Transfer the insert into an empty well of a 24 well plate and fill the well with one milliliter of DMEM/F12 After harvesting the desired number of human keratinocytes using a P200 pipette, aspirate 20 to 50 microliters of cell suspension.

Aim the pipette tip towards the center of the membrane and slowly press the pipette plunger, bringing the droplet into contact with the culture medium inside the insert. Once all membranes are transferred, move the plate in a figure eight pattern to distribute the cells evenly across the membranes. Incubate the culture at 37 degrees Celsius and 5%carbon dioxide.

Using tweezers, lift the inserts out of the 24-well plate, leaving the culture medium in the wells. Then invert the insert so that the basal side faces upwards. Place the inverted insert in the Petri dish, aspirate 20 microliters of the resuspended human keratinocytes cell suspension with a P200 pipette.

Aim the pipette tip towards the center of the membrane and slowly press the pipette plunger to form a droplet that falls onto the membrane. Place the lid on the Petri dish. Transfer the Petri dish and medium containing 24-well plate to the incubator for 30 minutes.

After incubation, bring the 24-well plate and Petri dish into the biological safety cabinet. Using tweezers, pick one insert and invert it so that the apical side of the membrane faces upwards and the basal side downwards. Using a P200 pipette, add 200 microliters of culture medium inside the insert, place the insert back into a prefilled well of the 24-well plate.

Culture the inserts at 37 degrees Celsius and 5%carbon dioxide. Keratinocytes cultured on the FN-silk membrane evenly covered the surface and showed cobblestone morphology on day one. Keratinocytes formed a confluent layer by day three indicating epithelial function and formed a network of tight junctions indicating they were assuming physiologic epithelial functions.

High cell viability was observed across FN-silk membranes after three days with no significant difference in viability between the center and periphery. The FN-silk membrane system supported keratinocyte viability similar to or better than commercial PET membrane systems.

Explore More Videos

Nanofibrillar Basement MembraneRecombinant Spider SilkExtracellular Matrix ModelsDrug DiscoveryAnimal Testing ReductionBiological RelevancePure Silk Protein MembraneSelf-assemblyCustom-designed Inserts3D PrintingCell Culturing Techniques

Related Videos

Silk Film Culture System for in vitro Analysis and Biomaterial Design

11:19

Silk Film Culture System for in vitro Analysis and Biomaterial Design

Related Videos

20K Views

Synthetic Spider Silk Production on a Laboratory Scale

13:36

Synthetic Spider Silk Production on a Laboratory Scale

Related Videos

27.5K Views

Air Filter Devices Including Nonwoven Meshes of Electrospun Recombinant Spider Silk Proteins

09:51

Air Filter Devices Including Nonwoven Meshes of Electrospun Recombinant Spider Silk Proteins

Related Videos

16.6K Views

ECM Protein Nanofibers and Nanostructures Engineered Using Surface-initiated Assembly

16:33

ECM Protein Nanofibers and Nanostructures Engineered Using Surface-initiated Assembly

Related Videos

13K Views

Engineered 3D Silk-collagen-based Model of Polarized Neural Tissue

06:17

Engineered 3D Silk-collagen-based Model of Polarized Neural Tissue

Related Videos

13K Views

Adapting the Electrospinning Process to Provide Three Unique Environments for a Tri-layered In Vitro Model of the Airway Wall

11:26

Adapting the Electrospinning Process to Provide Three Unique Environments for a Tri-layered In Vitro Model of the Airway Wall

Related Videos

13K Views

Microfluidic Dry-spinning and Characterization of Regenerated Silk Fibroin Fibers

08:28

Microfluidic Dry-spinning and Characterization of Regenerated Silk Fibroin Fibers

Related Videos

10.5K Views

Production of Extracellular Matrix Fibers via Sacrificial Hollow Fiber Membrane Cell Culture

06:01

Production of Extracellular Matrix Fibers via Sacrificial Hollow Fiber Membrane Cell Culture

Related Videos

7.9K Views

Fabrication of a Biomimetic Nano-Matrix with Janus Base Nanotubes and Fibronectin for Stem Cell Adhesion

07:14

Fabrication of a Biomimetic Nano-Matrix with Janus Base Nanotubes and Fibronectin for Stem Cell Adhesion

Related Videos

4.4K Views

Designing Silk-silk Protein Alloy Materials for Biomedical Applications

11:14

Designing Silk-silk Protein Alloy Materials for Biomedical Applications

Related Videos

18.9K Views

JoVE logo
Contact Us Recommend to Library
Research
  • JoVE Journal
  • JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
  • JoVE Visualize
Business
  • JoVE Business
Education
  • JoVE Core
  • JoVE Science Education
  • JoVE Lab Manual
  • JoVE Quizzes
Solutions
  • Authors
  • Teaching Faculty
  • Librarians
  • K12 Schools
  • Biopharma
About JoVE
  • Overview
  • Leadership
Others
  • JoVE Newsletters
  • JoVE Help Center
  • Blogs
  • JoVE Newsroom
  • Site Maps
Contact Us Recommend to Library
JoVE logo

Copyright © 2026 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved

Privacy Terms of Use Policies
WeChat QR code