Abstract
An appropriate cellular response to implanted surfaces is essential for tissue regeneration and integration. It is well described that implanted materials are immediately coated with proteins from
blood and interstitial fluids, and it is through this adsorbed layer that cells sense foreign surfaces.
Hence, it is the adsorbed proteins, rather than the surface itself, to which cells initially respond. Diverse
studies using a range of materials have demonstrated the pivotal role of extracellular adhesion
proteins—fibronectin and vitronectin in particular—in cell adhesion, morphology, and migration.
These events underlie the subsequent responses required for tissue repair, with the nature of
cell surface interactions contributing to survival, growth, and differentiation. The pattern in which
adhesion proteins and other bioactive molecules adsorb thus elicits cellular reactions specific to the
underlying physicochemical properties of the material. Accordingly,
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