33 research outputs found
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Controlling Structure with Injectable Biomaterials to Better Mimic Tissue Heterogeneity and Anisotropy
Tissue regeneration of sensitive tissues calls for injectable scaffolds, which are minimally invasive and offer minimal damage to the native tissues. However, most of these systems are inherently isotropic and do not mimic the complex hierarchically ordered nature of the native extracellular matrices. This review focuses on the different approaches developed in the past decade to bring in some form of anisotropy to the conventional injectable tissue regenerative matrices. These approaches include introduction of macroporosity, in vivo pattering to present biomolecules in a spatially and temporally controlled manner, availability of aligned domains by means of self-assembly or oriented injectable components, and in vivo bioprinting to obtain structures with features of high resolution that resembles native tissues. Toward the end of the review, different techniques to produce building blocks for the fabrication of heterogeneous injectable scaffolds are discussed. The advantages and shortcomings of each approach are discussed in detail with ideas to improve the functionality and versatility of the building blocks. © 2021 The Authors. Advanced Healthcare Materials published by Wiley-VCH Gmb
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Bicyclic RGD peptides enhance nerve growth in synthetic PEG-based Anisogels
Nerve regeneration scaffolds often consist of soft hydrogels modified with extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins or fragments, as well as linear and cyclic peptides. One of the commonly used integrin-mediated cell adhesive peptide sequences is Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD). Despite its straightforward coupling mechanisms to artificial extracellular matrix (aECM) constructs, linear RGD peptides suffer from low stability towards degradation and lack integrin selectivity. Cyclization of RGD improves the affinity towards integrin subtypes but lacks selectivity. In this study, a new class of short bicyclic peptides with RGD in a cyclic loop and 'random screened' tri-amino acid peptide sequences in the second loop is investigated as a biochemical cue for cell growth inside three-dimensional (3D) synthetic poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-based Anisogels. These peptides impart high integrin affinity and selectivity towards either αvÎČ3 or α5ÎČ1 integrin subunits. Enzymatic conjugation of such bicyclic peptides to the PEG backbone enables the formulation of an aECM hydrogel that supports nerve growth. Furthermore, different proteolytic cleavable moieties are incorporated and compared to promote cell migration and proliferation, resulting in enhanced cell growth with different degradable peptide crosslinkers. Mouse fibroblasts and primary nerve cells from embryonic chick dorsal root ganglions (DRGs) show superior growth in bicyclic RGD peptide conjugated gels selective towards αvÎČ3 or α5ÎČ1, compared to monocyclic or linear RGD peptides, with a slight preference to αvÎČ3 selective bicyclic peptides in the case of nerve growth. Synthetic Anisogels, modified with bicyclic RGD peptides and containing short aligned, magneto-responsive fibers, show oriented DRG outgrowth parallel to the fibers. This report shows the potential of PEG hydrogels coupled with bicyclic RGD peptides as an aECM model and paves the way for a new class of integrin selective biomolecules for cell growth and nerve regeneration
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Synthetic 3D PEG-Anisogel Tailored with Fibronectin Fragments Induce Aligned Nerve Extension
An enzymatically cross-linked polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based hydrogel was engineered to promote and align nerve cells in a three-dimensional manner. To render the injectable, otherwise bioinert, PEG-based material supportive for cell growth, its mechanical and biochemical properties were optimized. A recombinant fibronectin fragment (FNIII9*-10/12-14) was coupled to the PEG backbone during gelation to provide cell adhesive and growth factor binding domains in close vicinity. Compared to full-length fibronectin, FNIII9*-10/12-14 supports nerve growth at similar concentrations. In a 3D environment, only the ultrasoft 1 w/v% PEG hydrogels with a storage modulus of âŒ10 Pa promoted neuronal growth. This gel was used to establish the first fully synthetic, injectable Anisogel by the addition of magnetically aligned microelements, such as rod-shaped microgels or short fibers. The Anisogel led to linear neurite extension and represents a large step in the direction of clinical translation with the opportunity to treat acute spinal cord injuries
Fiber spinning for tissue engineering applications
Aiming to mimic the natural extracellular matrix (ECM) structure of tissues to facilitate the growth and maturation of 3D functional tissues in and ex vivo, many âtop-downâ and âbottom-upâ tissue engineering techniques have been employed over the past decades to fabricate 3D scaffolds. Among different scaffold types, fibrous constructs have always been of great interest due to their structure emulating the native fibrous ECM, and the possibility of the controlling fiber length, diameter, and organization to meet specific scaffold requirements for diverse tissue engineering applications. Compared to conventional fiber spinning techniques, such as electrospinning, Solvent Assisted Spinning (SAS) developed here enables the control of alignment, inter-fiber distance (IFD), and surface topography of fibers in an easier and more reliable manner. It is observed that the surface topography of SAS fibers, induced by phase separation, can alter cell mechanotransduction by changing cell cytoskeleton elongation and, potentially, nucleus pore opening. Further applications of SAS fibers demonstrate how nerve cell orientation, number of branching and maximum neurite length are affected by fiber surface topography at various IFDs. Moving from the developed 2.5D systems towards 3D constructs, a hybrid hydrogel (called Anisogel) is developed, which can be applied as an injectable therapeutic material, featuring both injectability and unidirectionality after injection. To do this, magneto responsive short fibers doped with iron oxide super-para-magnetic nanoparticles are developed and mixed with an injectable hydrogel. Following injection in the presence of a small external magnetic field, the short fibers orient in the direction of the magnetic field, while the surrounding hydrogel is enzymatically crosslinked to fix the position of the short fibers. Such types of hydrogels are an important new class of materials that can be applied in a minimally invasive manner and provide anisotropic guiding structures, important properties of therapeutic materials for soft tissues with linear ECM architecture, like the spinal cord. Compared to conventional hydrogels with isotropic structures, Anisogels with oriented short fibers show nerve cells linear growth and signal propagation in the direction fibers. Besides their tissue regeneration applications when used as scaffolds, fibers can also be used as medical devices for wound dressing and/or barrier for post injury tissue adhesion. By combining the properties of hydrogels and fibers, hydrogel fibers aiming to fully mimic the ECM structure and composition are presented. Using an optimized electrospinning process, and in combination with liquid star-shaped polyethylene glycol functionalized with epoxy and amine end groups, hydrogel fibers with variable properties (i.e. swelling rate, diameter) are made. These can be used for the fabrication of multilayered 3D constructs, each layer potentially possessing different chemical, physical, or mechanical properties in a gradient fashion, with great potential for their application as wound dressings. Overall, by altering fiber properties at different scales (i.e. nano, micro, macro), unique functions, such as injectability, remote orientation, surface topography, and water swellability, have been achieved, which alone or in combination can be used for various tissue engineering applications
Hierarchical fibrous guiding cues at different scales influence linear neurite extension
Surface topographies at micro- and nanoscales can influence different cellular behavior, such as their growth rate and directionality. While different techniques have been established to fabricate 2-dimensional flat substrates with nano- and microscale topographies, most of them are prone to high costs and long preparation times. The 2.5-dimensional fiber platform presented here provides knowledge on the effect of the combination of fiber alignment, inter-fiber distance (IFD), and fiber surface topography on contact guidance to direct neurite behavior from dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) or dissociated primary neurons. For the first time, the interplay of the micro-/nanoscale topography and IFD is studied to induce linear nerve growth, while controlling branching. The results demonstrate that grooved fibers promote a higher percentage of aligned neurite extension, compensating the adverse effect of increased IFD. Accordingly, maximum neurite extension from primary neurons is achieved on grooved fibers separated by an IFD of 30 ÎŒm, with a higher percentage of aligned neurons on grooved fibers at a large IFD compared to porous fibers with the smallest IFD of 10 ”m. We further demonstrate that the neurite âdecision-makingâ behavior on whether to cross a fiber or grow along it is not only dependent on the IFD but also on the fiber surface topography. In addition, axons growing in between the fibers seem to have a memory after leaving grooved fibers, resulting in higher linear growth and higher IFDs lead to more branching. Such information is of great importance for new material development for several tissue engineering applications. Statement of Significance: One of the key aspects of tissue engineering is controlling cell behavior using hierarchical structures. Compared to 2D surfaces, fibers are an important class of materials, which can emulate the native ECM architecture of tissues. Despite the importance of both fiber surface topography and alignment to direct growing neurons, the current state of the art did not yet study the synergy between both scales of guidance. To achieve this, we established a solvent assisted spinning process to combine these two crucial features and control neuron growth, alignment, and branching. Rational design of new platforms for various tissue engineering and drug discovery applications can benefit from such information as it allows for fabrication of functional materials, which selectively influence neurite behavior. © 202
An Injectable Hybrid Hydrogel with Oriented Short Fibers Induces Unidirectional Growth of Functional Nerve Cells
To regenerate soft aligned tissues in living organisms, low invasive biomaterials are required to create 3D microenvironments with a structural complexity to mimic the tissue's native architecture. Here, a tunable injectable hydrogel is reported, which allows precise engineering of the construct's anisotropy in situ. This material is defined as an Anisogel, representing a new type of tissue regenerative therapy. The Anisogel comprises a soft hydrogel, surrounding magneto-responsive, cell adhesive, short fibers, which orient in situ in the direction of a low external magnetic field, before complete gelation of the matrix. The magnetic field can be removed after gelation of the biocompatible gel precursor, which fixes the aligned fibers and preserves the anisotropic structure of the Anisogel. Fibroblasts and nerve cells grow and extend unidirectionally within the Anisogels, in comparison to hydrogels without fibers or with randomly oriented fibers. The neurons inside the Anisogel show spontaneous electrical activity with calcium signals propagating along the anisotropy axis of the material. The reported system is simple and elegant and the short magneto-responsive fibers can be produced with an effective high-throughput method, ideal for a minimal invasive route for aligned tissue therapy
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An Injectable Hybrid Hydrogel with Oriented Short Fibers Induces Unidirectional Growth of Functional Nerve Cells
To regenerate soft aligned tissues in living organisms, low invasive biomaterials are required to create 3D microenvironments with a structural complexity to mimic the tissue's native architecture. Here, a tunable injectable hydrogel is reported, which allows precise engineering of the construct's anisotropy in situ. This material is defined as an Anisogel, representing a new type of tissue regenerative therapy. The Anisogel comprises a soft hydrogel, surrounding magneto-responsive, cell adhesive, short fibers, which orient in situ in the direction of a low external magnetic field, before complete gelation of the matrix. The magnetic field can be removed after gelation of the biocompatible gel precursor, which fixes the aligned fibers and preserves the anisotropic structure of the Anisogel. Fibroblasts and nerve cells grow and extend unidirectionally within the Anisogels, in comparison to hydrogels without fibers or with randomly oriented fibers. The neurons inside the Anisogel show spontaneous electrical activity with calcium signals propagating along the anisotropy axis of the material. The reported system is simple and elegant and the short magneto-responsive fibers can be produced with an effective high-throughput method, ideal for a minimal invasive route for aligned tissue therapy
Granular cellulose nanofibril hydrogel scaffolds for 3D cell cultivation
The replacement of diseased and damaged organs remains an challenge in modern medicine. However, through the use of tissue engineering techniques, it may soon be possible to (re)generate tissues and organs using artificial scaffolds. For example, hydrogel networks made from hydrophilic precursor solutions can replicate many properties found in the natural extracellular matrix (ECM) but often lack the dynamic nature of the ECM, as many covalently crosslinked hydrogels possess elastic and static networks with nanoscale pores hindering cell migration without being degradable. To overcome this, macroporous colloidal hydrogels can be prepared to facilitate cell infiltration. Here, an easy method is presented to fabricate granular cellulose nanofibril hydrogel (CNF) scaffolds as porous networks for 3D cell cultivation. CNF is an abundant natural and highly biocompatible material that supports cell adhesion. Granular CNF scaffolds are generated by preâcrosslinking CNF using calcium and subsequently pressing the gel through micrometerâsized nylon meshes. The granular solution is mixed with fibroblasts and crosslinked with cell culture medium. The obtained granular CNF scaffold is significantly softer and enables wellâdistributed fibroblast growth. This costâeffective material combined with this efficient and facile fabrication technique allows for 3D cell cultivation in an upscalable manner
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High-Throughput Production of Micrometer Sized Double Emulsions and Microgel Capsules in Parallelized 3D Printed Microfluidic Devices
Double emulsions are useful geometries as templates for core-shell particles, hollow sphere capsules, and for the production of biomedical delivery vehicles. In microfluidics, two approaches are currently being pursued for the preparation of microfluidic double emulsion devices. The first approach utilizes soft lithography, where many identical double-flow-focusing channel geometries are produced in a hydrophobic silicone matrix. This technique requires selective surface modification of the respective channel sections to facilitate alternating wetting conditions of the channel walls to obtain monodisperse double emulsion droplets. The second technique relies on tapered glass capillaries, which are coaxially aligned, so that double emulsions are produced after flow focusing of two co-flowing streams. This technique does not require surface modification of the capillaries, as only the continuous phase is in contact with the emulsifying orifice; however, these devices cannot be fabricated in a reproducible manner, which results in polydisperse double emulsion droplets, if these capillary devices were to be parallelized. Here, we present 3D printing as a means to generate four identical and parallelized capillary device architectures, which produce monodisperse double emulsions with droplet diameters in the range of 500 ”m. We demonstrate high throughput synthesis of W/O/W and O/W/O double emulsions, without the need for time-consuming surface treatment of the 3D printed microfluidic device architecture. Finally, we show that we can apply this device platform to generate hollow sphere microgels
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Granular Cellulose Nanofibril Hydrogel Scaffolds for 3D Cell Cultivation
The replacement of diseased and damaged organs remains an challenge in modern medicine. However, through the use of tissue engineering techniques, it may soon be possible to (re)generate tissues and organs using artificial scaffolds. For example, hydrogel networks made from hydrophilic precursor solutions can replicate many properties found in the natural extracellular matrix (ECM) but often lack the dynamic nature of the ECM, as many covalently crosslinked hydrogels possess elastic and static networks with nanoscale pores hindering cell migration without being degradable. To overcome this, macroporous colloidal hydrogels can be prepared to facilitate cell infiltration. Here, an easy method is presented to fabricate granular cellulose nanofibril hydrogel (CNF) scaffolds as porous networks for 3D cell cultivation. CNF is an abundant natural and highly biocompatible material that supports cell adhesion. Granular CNF scaffolds are generated by pre-crosslinking CNF using calcium and subsequently pressing the gel through micrometer-sized nylon meshes. The granular solution is mixed with fibroblasts and crosslinked with cell culture medium. The obtained granular CNF scaffold is significantly softer and enables well-distributed fibroblast growth. This cost-effective material combined with this efficient and facile fabrication technique allows for 3D cell cultivation in an upscalable manner. © 2020 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Gmb