136 results on '"Aleksandr Ovsianikov"'
Search Results
2. 3D Bioprinting in Microgravity: Opportunities, Challenges, and Possible Applications in Space
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Angelique van Ombergen, Franziska Chalupa-Gartner, Parth Chansoria, Bianca Maria Colosimo, Marco Costantini, Marco Domingos, Alexandre Dufour, Carmelo De Maria, Jurgen Groll, Tomasz Jungst, Riccardo Levato, Jos Malda, Alessandro Margarita, Christophe Marquette, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Emma Petiot, Sophia Read, Leonardo Surdo, Wojciech Swieszkowski, Giovanni Vozzi, Johannes Windisch, Marcy Zenobi-Wong, and Michael Gelinsky
- Abstract
3D bioprinting has developed tremendously in the last couple of years and enables the fabrication of simple, as well as complex, tissue models. The international space agencies have recognized the unique opportunities of these technologies for manufacturing cell and tissue models for basic research in space, in particular for investigating the effects of microgravity and cosmic radiation on different types of human tissues. In addition, bioprinting is capable of producing clinically applicable tissue grafts, and its implementation in space therefore can support the autonomous medical treatment options for astronauts in future long term and far-distant space missions. The article discusses opportunities but also challenges of operating different types of bioprinters under space conditions, mainly in microgravity. While some process steps, most of which involving the handling of liquids, are challenging under microgravity, this environment can help overcome problems such as cell sedimentation in low viscous bioinks. Hopefully, this publication will motivate more researchers to engage in the topic, with publicly available bioprinting opportunities becoming available at the International Space Station (ISS) in the imminent future.
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- 2023
3. Gelatin methacryloyl as environment for chondrocytes and cell delivery to superficial cartilage defects
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Sara Žigon-Branc, Katja Hölzl, Marian Fürsatz, Marica Markovic, Anne Kleiner, Hakan Göcerler, Sylvia Nürnberger, Stefan Baudis, Pauschitz Andreas, Barbara Schädl, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Jasper Van Hoorick, Claudia Gahleitner, and Heinz Redl
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Cell type ,food.ingredient ,chondrocytes ,Biomedical Engineering ,biocompatible materials ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Osteoarthritis ,Gelatin ,MESENCHYMAL STEM-CELLS ,Biomaterials ,Chondrocytes ,food ,GROWTH-FACTOR RELEASE ,CHONDROGENESIS ,stem cells ,EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX ,medicine ,Humans ,Viability assay ,cartilage ,gelatin methacryloyl ,REPAIR ,Tissue Engineering ,Chemistry ,HYDROGEL ,Cartilage ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Hydrogels ,ARTICULAR-CARTILAGE ,Cell delivery ,Biocompatible material ,medicine.disease ,osteoarthritis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,STROMAL CELLS ,Methacrylates ,KNEE ,Stem cell ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Cartilage damage typically starts at its surface, either due to wear or trauma. Treatment of these superficial defects is important in preventing degradation and osteoarthritis (OA). Biomaterials currently used for deep cartilage defects lack appropriate properties for this application. Therefore, we investigated photo-crosslinked methacrylamide-modified gelatin (gelMA) as a candidate for treatment of surface defects. It allows for liquid application, filling of surface defects and forming a protective layer after UV-crosslinking, thereby keeping therapeutic cells in place. GelMA and photo-initiator (Li-TPO) concentration were optimized for application as a carrier to create a favourable environment for human articular chondrocytes (hAC). Primary hAC were used in passages 3 and 5, encapsulated into two different gelMA concentrations (7.5 wt% (soft) and 10 wt% (stiff)) and cultivated for 3 weeks with TGF-β3 (0, 1 and 10 ng/mL). Higher TGF-β3 concentrations induced spherical cell morphology independent of gelMA stiffness, while low TGF-β3 concentrations only induced rounded morphology in stiff gelMA. Gene expression did not vary across gel stiffnesses. As a functional model gelMA was loaded with two different cell types (hAC and/or human adipose-derived stem cells (ASC/TERT1) and applied to human osteochondral osteoarthritic plugs. GelMA attached to the cartilage, smoothened the surface and retained cells in place. Resistance against shear forces was tested using a tribometer, simulating normal human gait and revealing maintained cell viability. In conclusion gelMA is a versatile, biocompatible material with good bonding capabilities to cartilage matrix, allowing sealing and smoothening of superficial cartilage defects while simultaneously delivering therapeutic cells for tissue regeneration. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2021
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4. New water-soluble photo-initiators for two-photon polymerization based on benzylidene cyclopentanones
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Thomas Wloka, Steffen Czich, Franziska Chalupa-Gantner, Maria Sittig, Michael Dirauf, Christine Weber, Michael Gottschaldt, Klaus Liefeith, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Benjamin Dietzek-Ivanšić, and Ulrich S. Schubert
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General Chemical Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2023
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5. Publisher Correction: Guiding cell migration in 3D with high-resolution photografting
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Simon Sayer, Tommaso Zandrini, Marica Markovic, Jasper Van Hoorick, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Stefan Baudis, Wolfgang Holnthoner, and Aleksandr Ovsianikov
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Multidisciplinary - Published
- 2022
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6. Novel synthesis routes for the preparation of low toxic vinyl ester and vinyl carbonate monomers
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Robert Liska, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Andreas Hofecker, Marica Markovic, Patrick Steinbauer, and Patrick Knaack
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010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Vinyl ester ,Meth ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Photopolymer ,Monomer ,UV curing ,Organic chemistry ,Carbonate - Abstract
UV curing of photopolymerizable monomers, like (meth)acrylates, has been utilized for coatings for more than half a century and more recently in further developed areas such as tissue engineering. However, these monomers have major disadvantages, e.g., high irritancy and cytotoxicity, which leads to limited use in tissue engineering regarding health issues. Vinyl esters (VE) and vinyl carbonates (VC) can compete with (meth)acrylates in terms of material properties and have significantly lower toxicity, but lack in cost efficient synthesis methods. The purpose of this communication is to establish new pathways to overcome this drawback. It was shown that VEs can be synthesized either by vinyloxy trimethylsilane or by acetaldehyde in excellent yields. Moreover, a new method to synthesize vinyl chloroformate as precursor for VCs in lab scale was evolved by a catalyzed reaction of vinyloxy trimethylsilane with a phosgene solution. Finally, the cytotoxicity tests showed auspicious results.
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- 2020
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7. Hyaluronic acid vinyl esters: A toolbox toward controlling mechanical properties of hydrogels for 3D microfabrication
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Zuzana Tomášiková, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Wolfgang Steiger, Jakob Kitzmüller, Xiao-Hua Qin, Peter M. Gruber, Elise Zerobin, Marica Markovic, Robert Liska, Stefan Baudis, Davide Ret, and Patrick Steinbauer
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,Photopolymer ,Polymers and Plastics ,chemistry ,Hyaluronic acid ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Materials Chemistry ,Nanotechnology ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Cell encapsulation ,Biofabrication ,Microfabrication - Published
- 2020
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8. Breaking the magnetic symmetry by reorientation transition near 50 K in multiferroic magnetocaloric HoFeO3
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Oleg Usmanov, Vladimir Hutanu, Andrew Sazonov, Lars Peters, Henrik Thoma, Tapan Chatterji, Sergey Barilo, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Penelope Jane Brown
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Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Magnetic refrigeration ,Multiferroics ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,ddc:620 ,Symmetry (physics) ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
Using the new polarized neutron diffraction (PND) setup at MLZ the spin reorientation transition in the magnetocaloric orthoferrite HoFeO3 was studied at different wavelength. The various experiments provided reproducible results demonstrating high reliability of the used setup. We show that during the phase transition at TSR=53 K in an external magnetic field applied along crystal c-axis, the ordered magnetic moment of the Fe sublattice rotates from the crystallographic direction b to a not just in the ab plane, but through z axis. This means that the applied field breaks the orthorhombic symmetry allowing some magnetization parallel to z within a short temperature region. Interestingly, this is the same temperature region where large magnetocaloric effect for HoFeO3 was previously reported. A general model of the magnetic structure of HoFeO3, unconstrained by the orthorhombic symmetry, would allow the magnitudes and directions of the moments on each of the 8 magnetic sublattices in the unit cell to be independent of one-another, leading to 24 independent magnetic parameters. PND measurements were used to determine the absolute sign of the Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction (DMI) in the ab plane for the Fe magnetic sublattice at 65 K. DMI plays an important role in the energy balance of the system.
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- 2022
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9. Scaffolded-Spheroids with Enhanced Self-Assembly Dynamics as Building Blocks for Bottom-Up Tissue Engineering and Biofabrication
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Oliver Kopinski-Grünwald, Olivier Guillaume, Tamara Ferner, Barbara Schädl, and Aleksandr Ovsianikov
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
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10. Guiding cell migration in 3D with high-resolution photografting
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Simon, Sayer, Tommaso, Zandrini, Marica, Markovic, Jasper, Van Hoorick, Sandra, Van Vlierberghe, Stefan, Baudis, Wolfgang, Holnthoner, and Aleksandr, Ovsianikov
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Multidisciplinary ,Stem Cells ,HYDROGELS ,PERICYTES ,Hydrogels ,BLOOD-VESSEL FORMATION ,TISSUE CONSTRUCTS ,ANGIOGENESIS ,MECHANISMS ,NETWORKS ,Chemistry ,Adipose Tissue ,Cell Movement ,Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells ,Humans ,GROWTH ,VASCULARIZATION ,STEM-CELLS - Abstract
Multi-photon lithography (MPL) has proven to be a suitable tool to precisely control the microenvironment of cells in terms of the biochemical and biophysical properties of the hydrogel matrix. In this work, we present a novel method, based on multi-photon photografting of 4,4′-diazido-2,2′-stilbenedisulfonic acid (DSSA), and its capabilities to induce cell alignment, directional cell migration and endothelial sprouting in a gelatin-based hydrogel matrix. DSSA-photografting allows for the fabrication of complex patterns at a high-resolution and is a biocompatible, universally applicable and straightforward process that is comparably fast. We have demonstrated the preferential orientation of human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) in response to a photografted pattern. Co-culture spheroids of hASCs and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) have been utilized to study the directional migration of hASCs into the modified regions. Subsequently, we have highlighted the dependence of endothelial sprouting on the presence of hASCs and demonstrated the potential of photografting to control the direction of the sprouts. MPL-induced DSSA-photografting has been established as a promising method to selectively alter the microenvironment of cells.
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- 2022
11. Beyond the Threshold: A Study of Chalcogenophene-Based Two-Photon Initiators
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Markus Lunzer, Joseph S. Beckwith, Franziska Chalupa-Gantner, Arnulf Rosspeintner, Giuseppe Licari, Wolfgang Steiger, Christian Hametner, Robert Liska, Johannes Fröhlich, Eric Vauthey, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Brigitte Holzer
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General Chemical Engineering ,ddc:540 ,Materials Chemistry ,General Chemistry - Abstract
A series of nine soluble, symmetric chalcogenophenes bearing hexyl-substituted triphenylamines, indolocarbazoles, or phenylcarbazoles was designed and synthesized as potential two-photon absorption (2PA) initiators. A detailed photophysical analysis of these molecules revealed good 2PA properties of the series and, in particular, a strong influence of selenium on the 2PA cross sections, rendering these materials especially promising new 2PA photoinitiators. Structuring and threshold tests proved the efficiency and broad spectral versatility of two selenium-containing lead compounds as well as their applicability in an acrylate resin formulation. A comparison with commercial photoinitiators Irg369 and BAPO as well as sensitizer ITX showed that the newly designed selenium-based materials TPA-S and TPA-BBS outperform these traditional initiators by far both in terms of reactivity and dose. Moreover, by increasing the ultralow concentration of TPA-BBS, a further reduction of the polymerization threshold can be achieved, revealing the great potential of this series for application in two-photon polymerization (2PP) systems where only low laser power is available.200020-184607
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- 2021
12. Increasing the Microfabrication Performance of Synthetic Hydrogel Precursors through Molecular Design
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Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Tatevik Chalyan, Patrice Roose, Vera Rogiers, Koen Vanmol, Stefan Baudis, Hugo Thienpont, Robim Marcelino Rodrigues, Alessandra Natale, Tamara Vanhaecke, Jasper Van Hoorick, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Aysu Arslan, Peter Dubruel, Agnes Dobos, Jurgen Van Erps, Hugues Van den Bergen, Applied Physics and Photonics, Experimental in vitro toxicology and dermato-cosmetology, Vriendenkring VUB, Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, and Technology Transfer & Interface
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food.ingredient ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Bioengineering ,engineering.material ,Gelatin ,Polymerization ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Coating ,Manufacturing Industry ,Materials Chemistry ,Methacrylamide ,Acrylate ,Tissue Engineering ,Hydrogels ,Equipment Design ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Self-healing hydrogels ,engineering ,Surface modification ,Microtechnology ,Ethylene glycol - Abstract
Implementation of hydrogel precursors in two-photon polymerization (2PP) technology provides promising opportunities in the tissue engineering field thanks to their soft characteristics and similarity to extracellular matrix. Most of the hydrogels, however, are prone to post-fabrication deformations, leading to a mismatch between the computer-aided design and the printed structure. In the present work, we have developed novel synthetic hydrogel precursors to overcome the limitations associated with 2PP processing of conventional hydrogel precursors such as post-processing deformations and a narrow processing window. The precursors are based on a poly(ethylene glycol) backbone containing urethane linkers and are, on average, functionalized with six acrylate terminal groups (three on each terminal group). As a benchmark material, we exploited a precursor with an identical backbone and urethane linkers, albeit functionalized with two acrylate groups, that were reported as state-of-the-art. An in-depth characterization of the hexafunctional precursors revealed a reduced swelling ratio (36 MPa Young's modulus) compared to their difunctional analogs. The superior physical properties of the newly developed hydrogels lead to 2PP-based fabrication of stable microstructures with excellent shape fidelity at laser scanning speeds up to at least 90 mm s-1, in contrast with the distorted structures of conventional difunctional precursors. The hydrogel films and microscaffolds revealed a good cell interactivity after functionalization of their surface with a gelatin methacrylamide-based coating. The proposed synthesis strategy provides a one-pot and scalable synthesis of hydrogel building blocks that can overcome the current limitations associated with 2PP fabrication of hydrogel microstructures
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- 2021
13. Microscale 3D Printing and Tuning of Cellulose Nanocrystals Reinforced Polymer Nanocomposites
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Alexander Groetsch, Samuel Stelzl, Yannick Nagel, Tatiana Kochetkova, Nadim C. Scherrer, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Johann Michler, Laszlo Pethö, Gilberto Siqueira, Gustav Nyström, and Jakob Schwiedrzik
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T Technology (General) ,Biomaterials ,General Materials Science ,General Chemistry ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The increasing demand for functional materials and an efficient use of sustainable resources makes the search for new material systems an ever growing endeavor. With this respect, architected (meta-)materials attract considerable interest. Their fabrication at the micro- and nanoscale, however, remains a challenge, especially for composites with highly different phases and unmodified reinforcement fillers. This study demonstrates that it is possible to create a non-cytotoxic nanocomposite ink reinforced by a sustainable phase, cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs), to print and tune complex 3D architectures using two-photon polymerization, thus, advancing the state of knowledge toward the microscale. Micro-compression, high-res scanning electron microscopy, (polarised) Raman spectroscopy, and composite modeling are used to study the structure-property relationships. A 100% stiffness increase is observed already at 4.5 wt% CNC while reaching a high photo-polymerization degree of ≈80% for both neat polymers and CNC-composites. Polarized Raman and the Halpin-Tsai composite-model suggest a random CNC orientation within the polymer matrix. The microscale approach can be used to tune arbitrary small scale CNC-reinforced polymer-composites with comparable feature sizes. The new insights pave the way for future applications where the 3D printing of small structures is essential to improve performances of tissue-scaffolds, extend bio-electronics applications or tailor microscale energy-absorption devices.
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- 2022
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14. Hybrid spheroid microscaffolds as modular tissue units to build macro-tissue assemblies for tissue engineering
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Olivier Guillaume, Oliver Kopinski-Grünwald, Gregor Weisgrab, Theresia Baumgartner, Aysu Arslan, Karin Whitmore, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, and Aleksandr Ovsianikov
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Biomaterials ,Chemistry ,Biomedical Engineering ,General Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Since its inception, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine (TERM) has been relying on either scaffold-based or scaffold-free strategies. Recent reports outlined the possibility of a synergistic, convergence approach, referred to as the third TERM strategy, which could alleviate bottlenecks of the two previous options. This strategy requires the fabrication of highly porous microscaffolds, allowing to create single spheroids within each of them. The resulting tissue units can then be combined and used as modular building blocks for creating tissue constructs through a bottom-up self-assembly. Such strategy can have a significant impact for the future of TERM, but so far, no reports have assessed its feasibility in detail. This work reports a first systematic study, which includes a comparison of the in vitro behavior of tissue units based on adipose derived stem cell spheroids cultured within microscaffolds versus conventional spheroids. We first proved that the presence of the microscaffold neither impairs the cells 'ability to form spheroids nor impacts their viability. Importantly, the fusiogenic and the differentiation potential (i.e. chondrogenesis and osteogenesis), which are important features for cellularized building blocks to be used in TERM, are preserved when spheroids are cultured within microscaffolds. Significant benefits of microscaffold-based tissue units include the enhanced cell retention, the decreased compaction and the better control over the size observed when larger tissue constructs are formed through self-assembly. The proof of concept study presented here demonstrates the great potential offered by those microsize tissue units to be used as building blocks for directed tissue self-assembly. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: One of the most exciting and recent advances in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine (TERM) is to combine together multiple micro-size cellularized units, which are able to self-assemble altogether to recreate larger tissue constructs. In this work, we produce such modules by forming single spheroids within highly porous microscaffolds, and study how this new microenvironment impacts on the spheroid's behavior and stemness potential. This work highlights as well that such novel route is enabled by two-photon polymerization, which is an additive manufacturing technique offering high spatial resolution down to 100 nm. These findings provide a first scientific evidence about the utilization of hybrid spheroid microscaffold-based tissue units with great perspective as a modular tool for TERM.
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- 2021
15. α-Ketoesters as Nonaromatic Photoinitiators for Radical Polymerization of (Meth)acrylates
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Paul Gauss, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Marica Markovic, Patrick Knaack, Robert Liska, Markus Griesser, and Georg Gescheidt
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Acrylate ,Polymers and Plastics ,Biocompatibility ,Organic Chemistry ,Radical polymerization ,02 engineering and technology ,Chromophore ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Food packaging ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Photopolymer ,chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Photoinitiator ,Curing (chemistry) - Abstract
Photopolymerization of (meth)acrylate-based formulations has become a widespread method for industry due to the high energy efficiency and low curing times of this technology. Various products from simple coatings to more complex applications such as additive manufacturing technologies are based on this versatile method. Common industrial radical photoinitiators are generally based on aromatic ketones with the benzoyl chromophore as the key constituent. In medical or food packaging applications, residual photoinitiator or photoproducts migrating into the product have to be avoided, particularly for toxicological reasons. In this paper we present a new generation of nonaromatic initiator systems. Besides their good reactivity in (meth)acrylic formulations, they show good bleaching properties and high biocompatibility.
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- 2019
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16. A disulfide-based linker for thiol-norbornene conjugation: formation and cleavage of hydrogels by the use of light
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Markus Lunzer, Boris Maryasin, Tommaso Zandrini, Stefan Baudis, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Robert Liska
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Polymers and Plastics ,Organic Chemistry ,Bioengineering ,Biochemistry - Abstract
Photolabile groups are the key components of photo-responsive polymers, dynamically tunable materials with multiple applications in materials and life sciences. They usually consist of a chromophore and a labile bond and are inherently light sensitive. An exception are disulfides, simple reversible linkages, which become photocleavable upon addition of a photoinitiator. Despite their practical features, disulfides are rarely utilized due to their impractical formation. Here, we report a disulfide-based linker series bearing norbornene terminals for facile crosslinking of thiol-functionalized macromers
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- 2021
17. Abstract 6245: 3D-models of pediatric bone sarcomas for personalized therapeutic screening
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Branka Radic Sarikas, Mathias Ilg, Marica Markovic, Caterina Sturtzel, Eva Scheuringer, Justine Zulini, Martin Metzelder, Florian Halbritter, Martin Distel, Didier Surdez, Olivier Delattre, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Heinrich Kovar
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Osteosarcoma (OS) and Ewing sarcoma (ES) are the most common bone cancers in children. They are rare cancers and thus difficult to study due to scarcity of patient material, large genomic instability and a wide histological heterogeneity (in OS) or a lack of satisfactory transgenic animal model and availability of preclinical tests (in ES). There is a dire need for new models and novel therapeutic approaches. Although patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) may recapitulate human tumor biology and predict drug response, propagating PDXs in mice limits its use as a drug-testing platform. We have established and standardized ES and OS spheroid culture and developed a semi-automated drug-screening platform in tumor spheroids. We established several robust techniques for spheroid formation, with clear pathophysiological gradients, but without central necroses at the onset of drug treatment. We performed RNA-seq comparing spheroid transcription profiles to 2D culture and observed dramatic changes in overall expression patterns. We observed upregulation of genes shown to correlate with poor prognosis in OS patients. We saw upregulation of processes associated with regulation of cell migration, negative regulation of proliferation and modulation of the extracellular matrix (ECM). In addition to ES spheroid models, we created bioprinted 3D-models of ES cell lines and of cells obtained from ES PDXs, using extrusion bioprinting techniques (where cells are encapsulated within the cross-linked polymers, thus allowing homogeneous distribution and high cell density). PDX-derived cells were kept in liquid culture and as 3D-bioprinted constructs, while their transcription profiles were compared with the initial PDX. The mevalonate pathway was the most overrepresented in all ES 3D-models, consistent with predominant upregulation of this metabolic pathway integral to tumor growth and progression. After 15 days in 3D-bioprinted culture, we observed pronounced upregulation of genes involved in ECM signaling, suggesting that the construct promoted in vivo-like tumor-ECM interactions, without further promoting main proliferation and cell survival pathways, which was observed in liquid culture. Furthermore, we showed potential for combinatorial treatment with statins and confirmed feasibility of drug testing in patient-derived 3D models. Finally, as our spheroid models showed upregulation of many processes involved in metastasis (genes associated with invasion, migration, angiogenesis and hypoxia), we focused on lung as the most common site of metastasis in ES and OS patients. We are thus establishing mixed airway organoid/tumoroid cultures, to investigate further the lung metastatic niche, with a goal to provide proof of concept for patient-specific 3D-models of lung metastatic tumors to guide personalized drug selection for patients with advanced disease. Citation Format: Branka Radic Sarikas, Mathias Ilg, Marica Markovic, Caterina Sturtzel, Eva Scheuringer, Justine Zulini, Martin Metzelder, Florian Halbritter, Martin Distel, Didier Surdez, Olivier Delattre, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Heinrich Kovar. 3D-models of pediatric bone sarcomas for personalized therapeutic screening [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 6245.
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- 2022
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18. Instrument for tensile testing of individual collagen fibrils with facile sample coupling and uncoupling
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Mathis Nalbach, Franziska Chalupa-Gantner, Felix Spoerl, Victor de Bar, Benedikt Baumgartner, Orestis G. Andriotis, Shingo Ito, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Georg Schitter, and Philipp J. Thurner
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Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic ,Tensile Strength ,Humans ,Collagen ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Instrumentation ,Skin - Abstract
Collagen is the major structural protein in human bodies constituting about 30% of the entire protein mass. Through a self-assembly process, triple helical collagen molecules assemble into high aspect-ratio fibers of tens to hundreds of nanometer diameter, known as collagen fibrils (CFs). In the last decade, several methods for tensile testing these CFs emerged. However, these methods are either overly time-consuming or offer low data acquisition bandwidth, rendering dynamic investigation of tensile properties impossible. Here, we describe a novel instrument for tensile testing of individual CFs. CFs are furnished with magnetic beads using a custom magnetic tweezer. Subsequently, CFs are lifted by magnetic force, allowing them to be picked-up by a microgripper structure, which is mounted on a cantilever-based interferometric force probe. A piezo-lever actuator is used to apply tensile displacements and to perform tensile tests of tethered CFs, after alignment. Once the mechanical tests are finished, CFs are removed from the microgripper by application of a magnetic field. Our novel instrument enables tensile tests with at least 25-fold increased throughput compared to tensile testing with an atomic force microscope while achieving force resolution (p–p) of 10 nN at a strain resolution better than 0.1%.
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- 2022
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19. On-chip high-definition bioprinting of microvascular structures
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Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Marica Markovic, Liesbeth Tytgat, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Jasper Van Hoorick, Franziska Gantner, Agnes Dobos, and Applied Physics and Photonics
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Technology and Engineering ,Fabrication ,Angiogenesis ,0206 medical engineering ,Microfluidics ,microfluidic ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Multiphoton lithography ,Biochemistry ,Biomaterials ,multiphoton lithography ,high-resolution bioprinting ,thiol-ene chemistry ,hydrogels ,organ-on-chip ,vascularization ,Tissue engineering ,Laser power scaling ,Tissue Engineering ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Spheroid ,Bioprinting ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Hydrogels ,General Medicine ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Chemistry ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,0210 nano-technology ,Biotechnology ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
‘Organ-on-chip’ devices which integrate three-dimensional (3D) cell culture techniques with microfluidic approaches have the capacity to overcome the limitations of classical 2D platforms. Although several different strategies have been developed to improve the angiogenesis within hydrogels, one of the main challenges in tissue engineering remains the lack of vascularization in the fabricated 3D models. The present work focuses on the high-definition (HD) bioprinting of microvascular structures directly on-chip using two-photon polymerization (2PP). 2PP is a nonlinear process, where the near-infrared laser irradiation will only lead to the polymerization of a very small volume pixel (voxel), allowing the fabrication of channels in the microvascular range (10–30 µm in diameter). Additionally, 2PP not only enables the fabrication of sub-micrometer resolution scaffolds but also allows the direct embedding of cells within the produced structure. The accuracy of the 2PP printing parameters were optimized in order to achieve high-throughput and HD production of microfluidic vessel-on-chip platforms. The spherical aberrations stemming from the refractive index mismatch and the focusing depth inside the sample were simulated and the effect of the voxel compensation as well as different printing modes were demonstrated. Different layer spacings and their dependency on the applied laser power were compared both in terms of accuracy and required printing time resulting in a 10-fold decrease in structuring time while yielding well-defined channels of small diameters. Finally, the capacity of 2PP to create vascular structures within a microfluidic chip was tested with two different settings, by direct embedding of a co-culture of endothelial- and supporting cells during the printing process and by creating a supporting, cell-containing vascular scaffold barrier where the endothelial cell spheroids can be seeded afterwards. The functionality of the formed vessels was demonstrated with immunostaining of vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-Cadherin) endothelial adhesion molecules in both static and perfused culture.
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- 2020
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20. High-Resolution 3D Bioprinting of Photo-Cross-linkable Recombinant Collagen to Serve Tissue Engineering Applications
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Fabrice Bray, Hugo Thienpont, Liesbeth Tytgat, Heidi Ottevaere, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Lana Van Damme, Marica Markovic, Agnes Dobos, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Jasper Van Hoorick, Peter Dubruel, Applied Physics and Photonics, Faculty of Engineering, Technology Transfer & Interface, Brussels Photonics Team, Brussels Photonics Team [Bruxelles] (B-PHOT), Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Miniaturisation pour la Synthèse, l’Analyse et la Protéomique - UAR 3290 (MSAP), Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Miniaturisation pour la Synthèse, l’Analyse et la Protéomique - USR 3290 (MSAP), and Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
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food.ingredient ,Polymers and Plastics ,HYDROGELS ,High resolution ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Gelatin ,Article ,law.invention ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Tissue engineering ,law ,[CHIM.ANAL]Chemical Sciences/Analytical chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Methacrylamide ,Animals ,Cell encapsulation ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,3D bioprinting ,Tissue Engineering ,Tissue Scaffolds ,GELATIN ,Bioprinting ,Reproducibility of Results ,Hydrogels ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,[CHIM.POLY]Chemical Sciences/Polymers ,chemistry ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,Recombinant DNA ,Collagen ,0210 nano-technology ,STEM-CELLS - Abstract
Various biopolymers, including gelatin, have already been applied to serve a plethora of tissue engineering purposes. However, substantial concerns have arisen related to the safety and the reproducibility of these materials due to their animal origin and the risk associated with pathogen transmission as well as batch-to-batch variations. Therefore, researchers have been focusing their attention toward recombinant materials that can be produced in a laboratory with full reproducibility and can be designed according to specific needs (e.g., by introducing additional RGD sequences). In the present study, a recombinant protein based on collagen type I (RCPhC1) was functionalized with photo-cross-linkable methacrylamide (RCPhC1-MA), norbornene (RCPhC1-NB), or thiol (RCPhC1-SH) functionalities to enable high-resolution 3D printing via two-photon polymerization (2PP). The results indicated a clear difference in 2PP processing capabilities between the chain-growth-polymerized RCPhC1-MA and the step-growth-polymerized RCPhC1-NB/SH. More specifically, reduced swelling-related deformations resulting in a superior CAD-CAM mimicry were obtained for the RCPhC1-NB/SH hydrogels. In addition, RCPhC1-NB/SH allowed the processing of the material in the presence of adipose tissue-derived stem cells that survived the encapsulation process and also were able to proliferate when embedded in the printed structures. As a consequence, it is the first time that successful HD bioprinting with cell encapsulation is reported for recombinant hydrogel bioinks. Therefore, these results can be a stepping stone toward various tissue engineering applications.
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- 2020
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21. Thiol-norbornene gelatin hydrogels: influence of thiolated crosslinker on network properties and high definition 3D printing
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Liesbeth Tytgat, Tom Gheysens, Hugo Thienpont, Jurgen Van Erps, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Peter M. Gruber, Jasper Van Hoorick, Marica Markovic, Agnes Dobos, Lana Van Damme, Peter Dubruel, Faculty of Engineering, Applied Physics and Photonics, Brussels Photonics Team, and Technology Transfer & Interface
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Materials science ,food.ingredient ,Biocompatibility ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Multiphoton lithography ,Biochemistry ,Gelatin ,SCAFFOLDS ,Biofabrication ,Crosslinker ,gelatin ,thiol-ene Chemistry ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,INITIATOR ,TOOL ,multiphoton lithography ,ENCAPSULATION ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,crosslinker ,Norbornene ,POWERFUL ,Tissue Engineering ,biofabrication ,Biomaterial ,Hydrogels ,General Medicine ,DEGRADATION ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Norbornanes ,Chemistry ,Polymerization ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,LINKING ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,thiol-ene chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Photocrosslinkable gelatin hydrogels are excellent bioinks or biomaterial ink components to serve biofabrication applications. Especially the widely investigated gelatin-methacroyl hydrogels hold an impressive track record. However, over the past decade, increasing attention is being paid to thiol-ene photo-click chemistry to obtain hydrogel networks benefitting from a faster reactivity (i.e. seconds vs minutes) along with superior biocompatibility and processability. In order to exploit this photo-click chemistry, often an ene-functionality (e.g.. Norbornene) is introduced onto gelatin followed by crosslinking in the presence of a multifunctional thiol (e.g.. DTT). To date, very limited research has been performed on the influence of the applied thiolated crosslinker on the final hydrogel properties. Therefore, the present work assesses the influence of different thiolated crosslinkers on the crosslinking kinetics, mechanical properties and biological performance of the hydrogels upon encapsulation of primary adipose tissue-derived stem cells in which indicated a cell viability exceeding 70%. Furthermore, the different formulations were processed using two-photon polymerisation which indicated, in addition to differences in processing window and swelling ratio, a previously unreported phenomenon. At high intensities (i.e. ≥ 150 mW), the laser results in cleavage of the gelatin backbone even in the absence of distinct photo-cleavable functionalities. This can have potential to introduce channels or softer regions in gels to result in zones characterized by different degradation speeds or the formation of blood vessels. Consequently, the present study can be used to provide guidance towards tailoring the thiol-ene system towards the desired applications. Creative Commons Attribution license.
- Published
- 2020
22. Towards efficient initiators for two-photon induced polymerization: fine tuning of the donor/acceptor properties
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Markus Lunzer, Maximilian Tromayer, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Daniel Lumpi, Arnulf Rosspeintner, Sergej Naumov, Johannes Fröhlich, Robert Liska, Brigitte Holzer, Giuseppe Léonardo Licari, Ernst Horkel, Christian Hametner, and Eric Vauthey
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Process Chemistry and Technology ,Biomedical Engineering ,Substituent ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Photochemistry ,Triphenylamine ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Monomer ,Polymerization ,Unpaired electron ,chemistry ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,ddc:540 ,Materials Chemistry ,Thiophene ,Chemical Engineering (miscellaneous) ,Absorption (chemistry) ,Triplet state - Abstract
In this work we present the design, synthesis and systematic investigation of the optical properties of symmetric triphenylamine (TPA)-substituted thiophenes. The use of electron-donating (–OMe, –tBu, –Me, –TMS), -neutral (–H) or -withdrawing (–F, –CN, –SO2Me) substituents gives rise to D–A–D based two-photon absorption (2PA) chromophores. The photophysical properties of these compounds, including one-photon absorption and 2PA using two-photon-excited fluorescence, were investigated in different organic solvents with varying polarity. The maximum 2PA cross sections prove to be strongly dependent on the nature of the TPA substituent and range between ∼173 GM (Goeppert-Mayer units) and 379 GM. Although most of the investigated substances also exhibit high fluorescence quantum yields, two-photon absorption screening tests of an acrylate monomer formulation revealed the efficiency of these materials as 2PA photoinitiators. These results are supported by quantum chemical calculations of the spin density distribution indicating that the mechanism of polymerization initiation using acrylate monomer is favored by strong localization of the unpaired electrons in the triplet state on the C2 carbon of the thiophene moiety.
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- 2019
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23. Enhancing cell packing in buckyballs by acoustofluidic activation
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Tanchen Ren, Pu Chen, Wolfgang Steiger, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Utkan Demirci
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Gravity (chemistry) ,Materials science ,Fullerene ,0206 medical engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Cell Culture Techniques ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Biochemistry ,Vibration ,Biomaterials ,Mice ,Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Porosity ,Microscale chemistry ,Neurons ,General Medicine ,Fibroblasts ,Microfluidic Analytical Techniques ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,020601 biomedical engineering ,3. Good health ,Sphere packing ,Sound ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,NIH 3T3 Cells ,0210 nano-technology ,Porous medium ,Biotechnology - Abstract
How to pack materials into well-defined volumes efficiently has been a longstanding question of interest to physicists, material scientists, and mathematicians as these materials have broad applications ranging from shipping goods in commerce to seeds in agriculture and to spheroids in tissue engineering. How many marbles or gumball candies can you pack into a jar? Although these seem to be idle questions they have been studied for centuries and have recently become of greater interest with their broadening applications in science and medicine. Here, we study a similar problem where we try to pack cells into a spherical porous buckyball structure. The experimental limitations are short of the theoretical maximum packing density due to the microscale of the structures that the cells are being packed into. We show that we can pack more cells into a confined micro-structure (buckyball cage) by employing acoustofluidic activation and their hydrodynamic effect at the bottom of a liquid‐carrier chamber compared to randomly dropping cells onto these buckyballs by gravity. Although, in essence, cells would be expected to achieve a higher maximum volume fraction than marbles in a jar, given that they can squeeze and reshape and reorient their structure, the packing density of cells into the spherical buckyball cages are far from this theoretical limit. This is mainly dictated by the experimental limitations of cells washing away as well as being loaded into the chamber.
- Published
- 2020
24. Calibration of colloidal probes with atomic force microscopy for micromechanical assessment
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Peter M. Gruber, Lukas Kain, Martin Stolz, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Martin Frank, Marica Markovic, Philipp J. Thurner, Orestis G. Andriotis, David Grech, and Vedran Nedelkovski
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0301 basic medicine ,Materials science ,Cantilever ,Orders of magnitude (temperature) ,Biomedical Engineering ,Modulus ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Compression (physics) ,Biomaterials ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Mechanics of Materials ,Elastic Modulus ,Indentation ,Calibration ,Colloids ,Composite material ,Material properties ,Microscale chemistry ,Mechanical Phenomena - Abstract
Mechanical assessment of biological materials and tissue-engineered scaffolds is increasingly focusing at lower length scale levels. Amongst other techniques, atomic force microscopy (AFM) has gained popularity as an instrument to interrogate material properties, such as the indentation modulus, at the microscale via cantilever-based indentation tests equipped with colloidal probes. Current analysis approaches of the indentation modulus from such tests require the size and shape of the colloidal probe as well as the spring constant of the cantilever. To make this technique reproducible, there still exist the challenge of proper calibration and validation of such mechanical assessment. Here, we present a method to (a) fabricate and characterize cantilevers with colloidal probes and (b) provide a guide for estimating the spring constant and the sphere diameter that should be used for a given sample to achieve the highest possible measurement sensitivity. We validated our method by testing agarose samples with indentation moduli ranging over three orders of magnitude via AFM and compared these results with bulk compression tests. Our results show that quantitative measurements of indentation modulus is achieved over three orders of magnitude ranging from 1 kPa to 1000 kPa via AFM cantilever-based microindentation experiments. Therefore, our approach could be used for quantitative micromechanical measurements without the need to perform further validation via bulk compression experiments.
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- 2018
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25. The Synergy of Scaffold-Based and Scaffold-Free Tissue Engineering Strategies
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Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Vladimir Mironov, and Ali Khademhosseini
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0301 basic medicine ,Scaffold ,Computer science ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Regenerative Medicine ,Regenerative medicine ,Bone and Bones ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Tissue scaffolds ,Tissue engineering ,Biomimetics ,Spheroids, Cellular ,Animals ,Humans ,Tissue Engineering ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Management science ,Cell Differentiation ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Robotics ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,030104 developmental biology ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,0210 nano-technology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Tissue engineering (TE) is a highly interdisciplinary research field driven by the goal to restore, replace, or regenerate defective tissues. Throughout more than two decades of intense research, different technological approaches, which can be principally categorized into scaffold-based and scaffold-free strategies, have been developed. In this opinion article, we discuss the emergence of a third strategy in TE. This synergetic strategy integrates the advantages of both of these traditional approaches, while being clearly distinct from them. Its characteristic attributes, numerous practical benefits, and recent literature reports supporting our opinion, are discussed in detail.
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- 2018
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26. Synthesis of Fast Curing, Water‐Resistant and Photopolymerizable Glass for Recording of Holographic Structures by One‐ and Two‐Photon Lithography
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Tatsiana Mikulchyk, Mohamed Oubaha, Alicja Kaworek, Brendan Duffy, Markus Lunzer, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Sabad‐ E‐Gul, Izabela Naydenova, Dervil Cody, Enterprise Ireland, and Enterprise Ireland Commercialization Fund
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two-photon polymerization ,photopolymerizable glass ,water-resistant materials ,Physical Sciences and Mathematics ,volume holography ,sol-gel chemistry ,Holographic optical elements ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,holographic recording materials ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
Advancements in hybrid sol-gel technology have provided a new class of holographic materials as photopolymerizable glasses. Recently, a number of photosensitive glass compositions with high dynamic range and high spatial resolution have been reported and their excellent capability for volume holography has been demonstrated. Nevertheless, challenges remain, particularly in relation to the processing time and environmental stability of these materials, that strongly affect the performance and durability of the fabricated holograms. State-of-the-art photopolymerizable glasses possess long curing times (few days) required to achieve thick films, thus limiting the industrial implementation of this technology and its commercial viability. This article presents a novel, fast curing, water-resistant, photopolymerizable hybrid sol-gel (PHSG) for holographic applications. Due to introducing an amine-based modifier that increases the condensation ability of the sol-gel network, this PHSG overcomes the problem of long curing time and can readily produce thick (up to a few hundred micrometers) layers without cracking and breaking. In addition, this PHSG exhibits excellent water-resistance, providing stable performance of holographic gratings for up to 400 h of immersion in water. This finding moves photopolymerizable glasses to the next development stage and renders the technology attractive for the mass production of holographic optical elements and their use across a wide number of outdoor applications.
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- 2022
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27. A biocompatible diazosulfonate initiator for direct encapsulation of human stem cells via two-photon polymerization
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Peter M. Gruber, Maximilian Tromayer, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Robert Liska, Aliasghar Ajami, Agnes Dobos, and Roman Dedic
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Polymers and Plastics ,Biocompatibility ,Chemistry ,Singlet oxygen ,Organic Chemistry ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,3D cell culture ,Polymerization ,Two-photon excitation microscopy ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Biophysics ,0210 nano-technology ,Cell encapsulation ,Biofabrication - Abstract
Direct cell encapsulation is a powerful tool for fabrication of biomimetic 3D cell culture models in vitro. This method allows more precise recapitulation of the natural environment and physiological functions of cells compared to classical 2D cultures. In contrast to seeding cells on prefabricated scaffolds, cell encapsulation offers benefits regarding high initial cell loading, uniformity of cell distribution and more defined cell–matrix contact. Two-photon polymerization (2PP) based 3D printing enables the precise engineering of cell-containing hydrogel constructs as tissue models. Two-photon initiators (2PIs) specifically developed for this purpose still exhibit considerable cyto- and phototoxicity, impairing the viability of encapsulated cells. This work reports the development of the first cleavable diazosulfonate 2PI DAS, largely overcoming these limitations. The material was characterized by standard spectroscopic methods, white light continuum two-photon absorption cross-section measurements, and its photosensitization of cytotoxic singlet oxygen was compared to the well-established 2PI P2CK. When DAS is used at double concentration to compensate for the lower two-photon cross section, its performance in 2PP-printing of hydrogels is similar to P2CK based on structuring threshold and structure swelling measurements. PrestoBlue metabolic assay showed vastly improved cytocompatibility of DAS in 2D. Cell survival in 3D direct encapsulation via 2PP was up to five times higher versus P2CK, further demonstrating the excellent biocompatibility of DAS and its potential as superior material for laser-based biofabrication.
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- 2018
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28. Interaction of first trimester villous cytotrophoblasts and stromal cells in a 3D-organoid and 2D-hydrogel model
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Gudrun Meinhardt, Marica Markovic, Leila Saleh, Martin Knoefler, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Jan van Hoorick, and Sandra Haider
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Andrology ,First trimester ,Stromal cell ,Reproductive Medicine ,Chemistry ,Organoid ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Cytotrophoblasts ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2021
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29. Durch sichtbares Licht und Nahinfrarotstrahlung abbaubare supramolekulare Metallo-Gele
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Uwe Monkowius, Stefan Baudis, Markus Lunzer, Robert Liska, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Sabrina Theis, Christian Gorsche, Ian Teasdale, Aitziber Iturmendi, and Marco Orthofer
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010405 organic chemistry ,General Medicine ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences - Abstract
Der lichtempfindliche Rutheniumkomplex [Ru(bpy)2(4AMP)2](PF6)2 (4AMP=4-(Aminomethyl)pyridin) wurde uber die reaktiven Aminogruppen der durch Licht abspaltbaren 4AMP-Liganden in Polyharnstoff-Organo- oder -Hydrogele eingebaut. Im Dunkeln sind diese Gele sehr stabil. Durch Bestrahlen mit sichtbarem Licht oder NIR-Strahlung (letzteres mittels Zweiphotonenabsorption) werden die Ruthenium-Pyridin-Bindungen gespalten, was zum Abbau des supramolekularen Gels fuhrt. Dies ermoglicht eine raumlich und zeitlich aufgeloste Mikrostrukturierung des Gels mithilfe einer Photomaske oder eines gepulsten NIR-Lasers.
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- 2017
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30. Dynamic Coordination Chemistry Enables Free Directional Printing of Biopolymer Hydrogel
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Liyang Shi, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Hauke Carstensen, Dmitri A. Ossipov, Katja Hölzl, Markus Lunzer, Jöns Hilborn, and Hao Li
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Materials science ,General Chemical Engineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,engineering.material ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Soft materials ,0104 chemical sciences ,3. Good health ,Coordination complex ,chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,engineering ,Extrusion ,Biopolymer ,Gel state ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Three-dimensional (3D) printing is a promising technology to develop customized biomaterials in regenerative medicine. However, for the majority of printable biomaterials (bioinks) there is always a compromise between excellent printability of fluids and good mechanical properties of solids. Three-dimensional printing of soft materials based on the transition from a fluid to gel state is challenging because of the difficulties to control such transition as well as to maintain uniform conditions three-dimensionally. To solve these challenges, a facile chemical strategy for the development of a novel hydrogel bioink with shear-thinning and self-healing properties based on dynamic metal–ligand coordination bonds is presented. The noncovalent cross-linking allows easy extrusion of the bioink from a reservoir without changing of its bulk mechanical properties. The soft hydrogel can avoid deformation and collapse using omnidirectional embedding of the printable hydrogel into a support gel bath sharing the same ...
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- 2017
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31. Flexible oligomer spacers as the key to solid-state photopolymerization of hydrogel precursors
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Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Heidi Declercq, Jasper Van Hoorick, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Dirk Bontinck, Patrice Roose, Annemie Houben, Hugues Van den Bergen, Peter M. Gruber, and Peter Dubruel
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food.ingredient ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Gelatin ,Catalysis ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Colloid and Surface Chemistry ,food ,Polymer chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Methacrylamide ,Prepolymer ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Polymer ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Electrospinning ,0104 chemical sciences ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Photopolymer ,chemistry ,Polymerization ,Chemical engineering ,Nanofiber ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Efficient crosslinking of conventional photoreactive hydrogel precursors relies on the mobility of the reactive groups and is typically addressed from the liquid state. However, this represents a major limitation for many processing techniques of hydrogel materials. Herein, a model precursor is introduced that overcomes this challenge using a prepolymer designed to enable successful crosslinking in the solid state. The precursor is synthesized by connecting a flexible, mono-acrylated spacer to a semi-crystalline hydrophilic backbone polymer using a di-isocyanate linker. The resulting prepolymers exhibit excellent solid-state photoreactivity, even in the absence of a photo-initiator. As a proof of concept, the precursor has successfully been processed by: (1) solution electrospinning with subsequent solid-state photopolymerization (SSPP), (2) melt-based additive manufacturing with subsequent SSPP and (3) two-photon polymerization in the solid state. No cell adhesion takes place on bare crosslinked 3D-printed scaffolds whereas excellent cell adhesion is recovered after application of a gelatin methacrylamide coating. With this novel class of UV-reactive precursors unprecedented hydrogel processing avenues are opened.
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- 2017
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32. Fully automated z-scan setup based on a tunable fs-oscillator
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Dominik Theiner, Peter M. Gruber, Markus Lunzer, Jasper Van Hoorick, Wolfgang Steiger, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Agnes Dobos, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Robert Liska, and Faculty of Engineering
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Optical amplifier ,Materials science ,Matching (graph theory) ,business.industry ,Measure (physics) ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,010309 optics ,Wavelength ,Optics ,0103 physical sciences ,Range (statistics) ,Z-scan technique ,0210 nano-technology ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,business ,HIGH-REPETITION-RATE ,2-PHOTON ABSORPTION ,THERMAL-LENS ,3-PHOTON ,MICROFABRICATION ,4-PHOTON ,Microfabrication - Abstract
The z-scan technique has become a standard method to measure 2-photon absorption (2PA) properties of materials used for 2-photon applications. Here we present a completely automated, easily tunable z;-scan setup for spectral scanning. An algorithm collecting the required laser beam parameters allows to reliably determine the optimal working window of newly synthesized 2PA photoinitiators (PI) used for two-photon polymerization (2PP) in a wide spectral range. A complete spectrum (3 measurements per wavelength in 10 nm steps) can be obtained within an hour. Matching the wavelength used for 2PP to the maximum 2PA significantly increased the 2PP performance of the system. Published by The Optical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
- Published
- 2019
33. Thiol-Gelatin-Norbornene Bioink for Laser-Based High-Definition Bioprinting
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Agnes, Dobos, Jasper, Van Hoorick, Wolfgang, Steiger, Peter, Gruber, Marica, Markovic, Orestis G, Andriotis, Andreas, Rohatschek, Peter, Dubruel, Philipp J, Thurner, Sandra, Van Vlierberghe, Stefan, Baudis, and Aleksandr, Ovsianikov
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Tissue Engineering ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Lasers ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,Bioprinting ,Gelatin ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Norbornanes - Abstract
Two-photon polymerization (2PP) is a lithography-based 3D printing method allowing the fabrication of 3D structures with sub-micrometer resolution. This work focuses on the characterization of gelatin-norbornene (Gel-NB) bioinks which enables the embedding of cells via 2PP. The high reactivity of the thiol-ene system allows 2PP processing of cell-containing materials at remarkably high scanning speeds (1000 mm s
- Published
- 2019
34. Photo-crosslinkable recombinant collagen mimics for tissue engineering applications
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Marica Markovic, Liesbeth Tytgat, Maxime Vagenende, Hugo Thienpont, Taimoor H. Qazi, Christian Rolando, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Heidi Ottevaere, Peter Dubruel, José C. Martins, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Fabrice Bray, Miniaturisation pour la Synthèse, l’Analyse et la Protéomique - USR 3290 (MSAP), Institut de Chimie du CNRS (INC)-Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Universidade Federal do Tocantins (UFT), Universidade Federal do Tocantins, Department of Applied Physics and Photonics [Brussels] (TONA), Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Faculty of Sciences, Polymer Chemistry and Biomaterials Research Group, Universiteit Gent = Ghent University [Belgium] (UGENT), Applied Physics and Photonics, Faculty of Engineering, Brussels Photonics Team, Miniaturisation pour la Synthèse, l’Analyse et la Protéomique - UAR 3290 (MSAP), Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Universiteit Gent = Ghent University (UGENT)
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food.ingredient ,Biocompatibility ,IN-VITRO ,MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES ,GELATIN METHACRYLOYL ,HYDROGELS. PART ,BEHAVIOR ,Biomedical Engineering ,Adipose tissue ,Biocompatible Materials ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Gelatin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Tissue engineering ,medicine ,Methacrylamide ,Humans ,[CHIM]Chemical Sciences ,General Materials Science ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Tissue Engineering ,Regeneration (biology) ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Biomaterial ,General Chemistry ,General Medicine ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,[CHIM.POLY]Chemical Sciences/Polymers ,chemistry ,Collagen ,Swelling ,medicine.symptom ,0210 nano-technology ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Gelatin is frequently used in various biomedical applications. However, gelatin is generally extracted from an animal source, which can result in issues with reproducibility as well as pathogen transmittance. Therefore, we have investigated the potential of a recombinant peptide based on collagen I (RCPhC1) for tissue engineering applications and more specifically for adipose tissue regeneration. In the current paper, RCPhC1 was functionalized with photo-crosslinkable methacrylamide moieties to enable subsequent UV-induced crosslinking in the presence of a photo-initiator. The resulting biomaterial (RCPhC1-MA) was characterized by evaluating the crosslinking behaviour, the mechanical properties, the gel fraction, the swelling properties and the biocompatibility. The obtained results were compared with the data obtained for methacrylamide-modified gelatin (Gel-MA). The results indicated that the properties of RCPhC1-MA networks are comparable to those of animal-derived Gel-MA. RCPhC1-MA is thus an attractive synthetic alternative for animal-derived Gel-MA and is envisioned to be applicable for a wide range of tissue engineering purposes.
- Published
- 2019
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35. Screening of two-photon activated photodynamic therapy sensitizers using a 3D osteosarcoma model
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Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Markus Lunzer, Jasper Van Hoorick, Wolfgang Steiger, Dominik Theiner, Agnes Dobos, Peter M. Gruber, Faculty of Engineering, and Applied Physics and Photonics
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Porphyrins ,Cell Survival ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Photodynamic therapy ,Antineoplastic Agents ,02 engineering and technology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Benzylidene Compounds ,Analytical Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Two-photon excitation microscopy ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Electrochemistry ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Humans ,Eosin Y ,Spectroscopy ,Osteosarcoma ,Photons ,Photosensitizing Agents ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Photosensitizing Agent ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Porphyrin ,Fluorescence ,In vitro ,0104 chemical sciences ,SINGLET OXYGEN ,PHOTOSENSITIZERS ,EXCITATION ,CELLS ,PENETRATION ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Biophysics ,Eosine Yellowish-(YS) ,Cisplatin ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) involves a photosensitizing agent activated with light to induce cell death. Two-photon excited PDT (TPE-PDT) offers numerous benefits compared to traditional one-photon induced PDT, including an increased penetration depth and precision. However, the in vitro profiling and comparison of two-photon photosensitizers (PS) are still troublesome. Herein, we report the development of an in vitro screening platform of TPE-PS using a 3D osteosarcoma cell culture. The platform was tested using three different two-photon (2P) active compounds - a 2P sensitizer P2CK, a fluorescent dye Eosin Y, and a porphyrin derivative (TPP). Their 2P absorption cross-sections (σ2PA) were characterised using a fully automated z-scan setup. TPP exhibited a remarkably high σ2PA at 720 nm (8865 GM) and P2CK presented a high absorption at 850 nm (405 GM), while Eosin Y had the lowest 2P absorption at the studied wavelengths (
- Published
- 2019
36. Modular material system for the microfabrication of biocompatible hydrogels based on thiol-ene-modified poly(vinyl alcohol)
- Author
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Robert Liska, Daniel Bomze, Marica Markovic, Stefan Baudis, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Peter M. Gruber
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Vinyl alcohol ,Polymers and Plastics ,Organic Chemistry ,Succinic anhydride ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Macromonomer ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Photopolymer ,chemistry ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Polymer chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,0210 nano-technology ,Photoinitiator ,Ene reaction - Abstract
Novel modifications of the synthetic polymer poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) were developed for application in the field of biomedical engineering. PVA was modified with allyl succinic anhydride, norbornene anhydride as well as with γ-thiobutyrolactone to produce macromers with reactive ene and thiol groups, respectively. Cytotoxicity studies have shown that the material exhibits almost no cell-toxicity, when used in concentrations of 1 and 0.1 wt % for 24 h. The obtained macromers were photocrosslinked via thiol–ene chemistry. Storage stability of the macromer mixtures with different concentrations of pyrogallol as stabilizer were investigated. Photorheometry was employed to optimize mixtures concerning reactivity based on their thiol-to-ene ratio, photoinitiator concentration, and macromer content. The crosslinked hydrogels were studied concerning their swellability. To form hydrogels with cellular structure two-photon-polymerization (2PP) was employed. Processing windows for 2PP of selected mixtures were determined. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 2016, 54, 2060–2070
- Published
- 2016
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37. Impact of Hydrogel Stiffness on Differentiation of Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cell Microspheroids
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Sara, Žigon-Branc, Marica, Markovic, Jasper, Van Hoorick, Sandra, Van Vlierberghe, Peter, Dubruel, Elise, Zerobin, Stefan, Baudis, and Aleksandr, Ovsianikov
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Cell Survival ,Stem Cells ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Cell Differentiation ,Hydrogels ,macromolecular substances ,Original Articles ,Cells, Immobilized ,adult stem cells ,cell encapsulation ,bone ,Adipose Tissue ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Elastic Modulus ,Spheroids, Cellular ,Humans ,Calcium ,Rheology ,cartilage ,Cell Shape ,Chondrogenesis ,Glycosaminoglycans - Abstract
Hydrogels represent an attractive material platform for realization of three-dimensional (3D) tissue-engineered constructs, as they have tunable mechanical properties, are compatible with different types of cells, and resemble elements found in natural extracellular matrices. So far, numerous hydrogel-cartilage/bone tissue engineering (TE)-related studies were performed by utilizing a single cell encapsulation approach. Although multicellular spheroid cultures exhibit advantageous properties for cartilage or bone TE, the chondrogenic or osteogenic differentiation potential of stem cell microspheroids within hydrogels has not been investigated much. This study explores, for the first time, how stiffness of gelatin-based hydrogels (having a storage modulus of 538, 3584, or 7263 Pa) affects proliferation and differentiation of microspheroids formed from telomerase-immortalized human adipose-derived stem cells (hASC/hTERT). Confocal microscopy indicates that all tested hydrogels supported cell viability during their 3- to 5-week culture period in the control, chondrogenic, or osteogenic medium. Although in the softer hydrogels cells from neighboring microspheroids started outgrowing and interconnecting within a few days, their protrusion was slower or limited in stiffer hydrogels or those cultured in chondrogenic medium, respectively. High expressions of chondrogenic markers (SOX9, ACAN, COL2A1), detected in all tested hydrogels, proved that the chondrogenic differentiation of hASC/hTERT microspheroids was very successful, especially in the two softer hydrogels, where superior cartilage-specific properties were confirmed by Alcian blue staining. These chondrogenically induced samples also expressed COL10A1, a marker of chondrocyte hypertrophy. Interestingly, the hydrogel itself (with no differentiation medium) showed a slight chondrogenic induction. Regardless of the hydrogel stiffness, in the samples stimulated with osteogenic medium, the expression of selected markers RUNX2, BGLAP, ALPL, and COL1A1 was not conclusive. Nevertheless, the von Kossa staining confirmed the presence of calcium deposits in osteogenically stimulated samples in the two softer hydrogels, suggesting that these also favor osteogenesis. This observation was also confirmed by Alizarin red quantification assay, with which higher amounts of calcium were detected in the osteogenically induced hydrogels than in their controls. The presented data indicate that the encapsulation of adipose-derived stem cell microspheroids in gelatin-based hydrogels show promising potential for future applications in cartilage or bone TE. Impact Statement Osteochondral defects represent one of the leading causes of disability in the world. Although numerous tissue engineering (TE) approaches have shown success in cartilage and bone tissue regeneration, achieving native-like characteristics of these tissues remains challenging. This study demonstrates that in the presence of a corresponding differentiation medium, gelatin-based hydrogels support moderate osteogenic and excellent chondrogenic differentiation of photo-encapsulated human adipose-derived stem cell microspheroids, the extent of which depends on hydrogel stiffness. Because photosensitive hydrogels are a convenient material platform for creating stiffness gradients in three dimensions, the presented microspheroid-hydrogel encapsulation strategy holds promise for future strategies of cartilage or bone TE.
- Published
- 2019
38. (Photo-)crosslinkable gelatin derivatives for biofabrication applications
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Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Agnes Dobos, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Peter Dubruel, Heidi Ottevaere, Jasper Van Hoorick, Liesbeth Tytgat, Jurgen Van Erps, Hugo Thienpont, Faculty of Engineering, Applied Physics and Photonics, Brussels Photonics Team, and Technology Transfer & Interface
- Subjects
Materials science ,food.ingredient ,ALDER CLICK CHEMISTRY ,CROSS-LINKING ,Additive manufacturing ,0206 medical engineering ,HYDROGELS ,Biomedical Engineering ,FABRICATION ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Biofabrication ,RHEOLOGICAL PROPERTIES ,Biochemistry ,Gelatin ,IN-VITRO ,FUNCTIONALIZED GELATIN ,2-PHOTON POLYMERIZATION ,BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS ,EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX ,Polymerization ,Biomaterials ,food ,Tissue engineering ,Molecular Biology ,Modification strategies ,Crosslinking chemistry ,Bioprinting ,Biomaterial ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Gelatin derivatives ,Hydrogels ,General Medicine ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,020601 biomedical engineering ,Chemistry ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Click Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Over the recent decades gelatin has proven to be very suitable as an extracellular matrix mimic for biofabrication and tissue engineering applications. However, gelatin is prone to dissolution at typical cell culture conditions and is therefore often chemically modified to introduce (photo-)crosslinkable functionalities. These modifications allow to tune the material properties of gelatin, making it suitable for a wide range of biofabrication techniques both as a bioink and as a biomaterial ink (component). The present review provides a non-exhaustive overview of the different reported gelatin modification strategies to yield crosslinkable materials that can be used to form hydrogels suitable for biofabrication applications. The different crosslinking chemistries are discussed and classified according to their mechanism including chain-growth and step-growth polymerization. The step-growth polymerization mechanisms are further classified based on the specific chemistry including different (photo-)click chemistries and reversible systems. The benefits and drawbacks of each chemistry are also briefly discussed. Furthermore, focus is placed on different biofabrication strategies using either inkjet, deposition or light-based additive manufacturing techniques, and the applications of the obtained 3D constructs. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Gelatin and more specifically gelatin-methacryloyl has emerged to become one of the gold standard materials as an extracellular matrix mimic in the field of biofabrication. However, also other modification strategies have been elaborated to take advantage of a plethora of crosslinking chemistries. Therefore, a review paper focusing on the different modification strategies and processing of gelatin is presented. Particular attention is paid to the underlying chemistry along with the benefits and drawbacks of each type of crosslinking chemistry. The different strategies were classified based on their basic crosslinking mechanism including chain- or step-growth polymerization. Within the step-growth classification, a further distinction is made between click chemistries as well as other strategies. The influence of these modifications on the physical gelation and processing conditions including mechanical properties is presented. Additionally, substantial attention is put to the applied photoinitiators and the different biofabrication technologies including inkjet, deposition or light-based technologies.
- Published
- 2019
39. A Modular Approach to Sensitized Two-Photon Patterning of Photodegradable Hydrogels
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Dmitri A. Ossipov, Robert Liska, Philipp J. Thurner, Liyang Shi, Orestis G. Andriotis, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Peter M. Gruber, Markus Lunzer, and Marica Markovic
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Biocompatibility ,Nanotechnology ,Biocompatible Materials ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Benzylidene Compounds ,Catalysis ,Cell Line ,Polyethylene Glycols ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tissue engineering ,Hyaluronic acid ,hyaluronic acid ,Humans ,Photosensitizer ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,hydrogels ,Nitrobenzenes ,Organisk kemi ,Photons ,Photolysis ,Photosensitizing Agents ,photochemistry ,Tissue Engineering ,Chemistry ,Communication ,Organic Chemistry ,Hydrogels ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Small molecule ,Communications ,0104 chemical sciences ,Self-healing hydrogels ,sensitizers ,Degradation (geology) ,Click Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Micropatterning ,biomaterials - Abstract
Photodegradable hydrogels have emerged as useful platforms for research on cell function, tissue engineering, and cell delivery as their physical and chemical properties can be dynamically controlled by the use of light. The photo‐induced degradation of such hydrogel systems is commonly based on the integration of photolabile o‐nitrobenzyl derivatives to the hydrogel backbone, because such linkers can be cleaved by means of one‐ and two‐photon absorption. Herein we describe a cytocompatible click‐based hydrogel containing o‐nitrobenzyl ester linkages between a hyaluronic acid backbone, which is photodegradable in the presence of cells. It is demonstrated for the first time that by using a cyclic benzylidene ketone‐based small molecule as photosensitizer the efficiency of the two‐photon degradation process can be improved significantly. Biocompatibility of both the improved two‐photon micropatterning process as well as the hydrogel itself is confirmed by cell culture studies.
- Published
- 2018
40. Fabrication of biomimetic placental barrier structures within a microfluidic device utilizing two-photon polymerization
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Peter Ertl, Mario Rothbauer, Jasper Van Hoorick, Denise Mandt, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Peter M. Gruber, Wolfgang Holnthoner, Sebastian Rudi Adam Krayz, Severin Mühleder, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Maximillian Tromayer, Marica Markovic, Robert Liska, Peter Dubruel, Faheem Ali, Faculty of Engineering, and Applied Physics and Photonics
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Technology and Engineering ,Materials Science (miscellaneous) ,HYDROGELS ,microstructure ,FIBRONECTIN ,02 engineering and technology ,Gelatin ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Extracellular matrix ,03 medical and health sciences ,food ,Placenta ,medicine ,CELL ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,model ,biology ,GELATIN ,Biology and Life Sciences ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,In vitro ,TRANSPORT ,Fibronectin ,placental barrier ,two-photon polymerization ,Chemistry ,Membrane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Paracellular transport ,Self-healing hydrogels ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,0210 nano-technology ,high resolution 3D printing ,biotechnology ,Research Article - Abstract
The placenta is a transient organ, essential for development and survival of the unborn fetus. It interfaces the body of the pregnant woman with the unborn child and secures transport of endogenous and exogenous substances. Maternal and fetal blood are thereby separated at any time, by the so-called placental barrier. Current in vitro approaches fail to model this multifaceted structure, therefore research in the field of placental biology is particularly challenging. The present study aimed at establishing a novel model, simulating placental transport and its implications on development, in a versatile but reproducible way. The basal membrane was replicated using a gelatin-based material, closely mimicking the composition and properties of the natural extracellular matrix. The microstructure was produced by using a high-resolution 3D printing method – the two-photon polymerization (2PP). In order to structure gelatin by 2PP, its primary amines and carboxylic acids are modified with methacrylamides and methacrylates (GelMOD-AEMA), respectively. High-resolution structures in the range of a few micrometers were produced within the intersection of a customized microfluidic device, separating the x-shaped chamber into two isolated cell culture compartments. Human umbilical-vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) seeded on one side of this membrane simulate the fetal compartment while human choriocarcinoma cells, isolated from placental tissue (BeWo B30) mimic the maternal syncytium. This barrier model in combination with native flow profiles can be used to mimic the microenvironment of the placenta, investigating different pharmaceutical, clinical and biological scenarios. As proof-of-principle, this bioengineered placental barrier was used for the investigation of transcellular transport processes. While high molecular weight substances did not permeate, smaller molecules in the size of glucose were able to diffuse through the barrier in a time-depended manner. We envision to apply this bioengineered placental barrier for pathophysiological research, where altered nutrient transport is associated with health risks for the fetus.
- Published
- 2018
41. Dispersive white light continuum single Z-scan for rapid determination of degenerate two-photon absorption spectra
- Author
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Wolfgang Husinsky, Robert Liska, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Aliasghar Ajami
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Quantum optics ,Materials science ,Argon ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,business.industry ,General Engineering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Physics::Optics ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Two-photon absorption ,Spectral line ,Article ,010309 optics ,Wavelength ,Optics ,chemistry ,0103 physical sciences ,Transmittance ,Z-scan technique ,Cylindrical lens ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
We present an experimental technique to determine the degenerate two-photon absorption (2PA) spectra by performing a single Z-scan using a high-spectral-irradiance white light continuum (WLC) generated by a hollow core fiber. The hollow fiber was filled with Argon (Ar) gas at a pressure of 0.6 bar and was pumped with 500 mJ, 30 fs, and 800 nm pulses. The broadband WLC pulses with 350 nm bandwidth in the range of 600-950 nm were compressed to sub-8 fs pulses. To characterize and interpret the data obtained from this method, the spectral, temporal and spatial characteristics of the WLC were first analyzed. The WLC emerging from the compressor was dispersed using a prism pair and then focused into the sample by a cylindrical lens. Since different spectral components are spatially separated, any part of the sample in the beam cross section is irradiated with almost single wavelength pulses leading to only a degenerate 2PA process. The nonlinear transmittance was then measured by a charge-coupled-device (CCD) line camera as a function of the sample position while the sample was moved along the beam direction by a motorized translation stage. In this way the Z-scans at different wavelengths in the WLC spectral range can be measured and thus the wavelength-resolved degenerate 2PA spectra can be obtained by performing a single scan using dispersive WLC. This method was verified on a well-characterized dye Rhodamine B and yield a reasonable agreement with the data found in the literature. We used this method to determine the 2PA spectra of some two-photon initiators (2PIs) developed for two-photon polymerization (2PP) based 3D micro-structuring.
- Published
- 2018
42. Wavelength-optimized Two-Photon Polymerization Using Initiators Based on Multipolar Aminostyryl-1,3,5-triazines
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Maximilian Tromayer, Arnulf Rosspeintner, Robert Liska, Felix Plasser, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Eric Vauthey, Wolfgang Husinsky, Peter M. Gruber, Aliasghar Ajami, and Leticia González
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Materials science ,Fabrication ,lcsh:Medicine ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,law.invention ,law ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Laser ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemistry ,Wavelength ,Polymerization ,Excited state ,Femtosecond ,ddc:540 ,Optoelectronics ,lcsh:Q ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Materials for optics ,Microfabrication - Abstract
Two-photon induced polymerization (2PP) based 3D printing is a powerful microfabrication tool. Specialized two-photon initiators (2PIs) are critical components of the employed photosensitive polymerizable formulations. This work investigates the cooperative enhancement of two-photon absorption cross sections (σ2PA) in a series of 1,3,5-triazine-derivatives bearing 1-3 aminostyryl-donor arms, creating dipolar, quadrupolar and octupolar push-pull systems. The multipolar 2PIs were successfully prepared and characterized, σ2PA were determined using z-scan at 800 nm as well as spectrally resolved two-photon excited fluorescence measurements, and the results were compared to high-level ab initio computations. Modern tunable femtosecond lasers allow 2PP-processing at optimum wavelengths tailored to the absorption behavior of the 2PI. 2PP structuring tests revealed that while performance at 800 nm is similar, at their respective σ2PA-maxima the octupolar triazine-derivative outperforms a well-established ketone-based quadrupolar reference 2PI, with significantly lower fabrication threshold at exceedingly high writing speeds up to 200 mm/s and a broader window for ideal processing parameters.
- Published
- 2018
43. Highly Reactive Thiol-Norbornene Photo-Click Hydrogels: Toward Improved Processability
- Author
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Marica Markovic, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Peter Dubruel, Jurgen Van Erps, Mélanie Rollot, Geert-Jan Graulus, Hugo Thienpont, José C. Martins, Maximilian Tromayer, Peter M. Gruber, Sandra Van Vlierberghe, Stefan Baudis, Maxime Vagenende, Jasper Van Hoorick, Applied Physics and Photonics, Faculty of Engineering, and Brussels Photonics Team
- Subjects
Materials science ,food.ingredient ,Polymers and Plastics ,Biocompatibility ,Light ,Biocompatible Materials ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Gelatin ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Polymerization ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,food ,Materials Chemistry ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Norbornene ,GELATIN ,CHEMISTRY ,Tissue Engineering ,Organic Chemistry ,Hydrogels ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Grafting ,Norbornanes ,0104 chemical sciences ,Cross-Linking Reagents ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Self-healing hydrogels ,Surface modification ,Click Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Biofabrication - Abstract
In the present work, gelatin type B is modified with highly reactive norbornene functionalities (Gel-NB) following a one-pot synthesis approach to enable subsequent thiol-ene photo-click crosslinking. The modification strategy displays close control over the amount of introduced functionalities. Additionally, Gel-NB exhibits considerably improved processing capabilities in terms of two-photon polymerization when benchmarked to earlier-reported crosslinkable gelatin derivatives (e.g., gelatin-methacrylamide (Gel-MOD) and gelatin-methacrylamide-aminoethylmethacrylate (Gel-MOD-AEMA)). The improvement is especially apparent in terms of minimally required laser power (20 mW vs >= 60 mW (Gel-MOD) vs >= 40 mW (Gel-MOD-AEMA) at 100 mm s(-1) scan speed) and processable concentration range (>= 5 w/v% vs >= 10 w/v% (Gel-MOD/Gel-MOD-AEMA)). Furthermore, the proposed functionalization scheme maintains the excellent biocompatibility and cell interactivity of gelatin. Additionally, the norbornene functionalities have potential for straightforward postprocessing thiol-ene surface grafting of active molecules. As a consequence, a very promising material toward tissue engineering applications and more specifically, biofabrication, is presented.
- Published
- 2018
44. Highly efficient water-soluble visible light photoinitiators
- Author
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Hansjörg Grützmacher, Stephan Benedikt, Robert Liska, Kurt Dietliker, Jieping Wang, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Mmarica Markovic, and Norbert Moszner
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Aqueous solution ,Polymers and Plastics ,Biocompatibility ,Double bond ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Radical polymerization ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Photochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Materials Chemistry ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,Solubility ,0210 nano-technology ,Photoinitiator ,Visible spectrum - Abstract
The monoacylphosphineoxide (MAPO) salts Na-TPO and Li-TPO and the bisacylphosphineoxide (BAPO) salts BAPO-ONa and BAPO-OLi define an important and in the latter case a new class of water-soluble photoinitiators (PIs) for radical polymerization. These compounds showed excellent water-solubility of at least 29 g/L for Na-TPO and up to 60 g/L for BAPO-ONa in deionized water, thus exceeding the solubility of the state of the art PI for water-based systems Irgacure 2959 (I2959) 6- to 12-fold. However, biocompatibility, storage stability, and reactivity were equally important to replace the state of the art compounds. Concerning these properties, the MAPO and BAPO salts were at least in the same range (biocompatibility, stability) or showed even better results (reactivity) and had the additional advantage of visible light initiation. Na-TPO and Li-TPO achieved double bond conversions of an aqueous solution of N-acryloylmorpholine over 97% with broad band irradiation (320–500 nm), Li-TPO showed additionally very good biocompatibility (LC50 = 3.1 mmol/L) and BAPO-OLi showed highest reactivity with visible light irradiation. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 2016, 54, 473–479
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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45. Evidence of concentration dependence of the two-photon absorption cross section: Determining the 'true' cross section value
- Author
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Peter M. Gruber, Maximilian Tromayer, Robert Liska, Jürgen Stampfl, Aliasghar Ajami, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, and Wolfgang Husinsky
- Subjects
Dye laser ,Molar concentration ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Analytical chemistry ,Nonlinear optics ,Chromophore ,Two-photon absorption ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Characterization (materials science) ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Cross section (physics) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Absorption (electromagnetic radiation) ,Biological system ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
The two-photon absorption (2PA) phenomenon is the basis of many unique applications involving suitable chromophores as photoinitiators. Ideally the 2PA cross section should, therefore, be a unique parameter, allowing quantification and comparing 2PA capabilities of different substances. In this report, the most straightforward and widespread method, the Z-scan technique, was used for determining the 2PA cross-section values of three different synthesized photoinitiators and one laser dye as a standard. It is demonstrated that the experimentally obtained values strongly depend on the molar concentration of a measured solution. A tenfold decrease in substance concentration can lead to the doubling of the 2PA cross-section. A similar concentration dependence was confirmed for all three investigated substances. Among the crucial implications of this observed behavior is the questionable possibility to compare the 2PA characteristics of different compounds based on the values reported in the literature. An example of another important consequence of this effect extends i.e. to the calculation of the dose necessary for killing the tumor cells in 2PA-based photodynamic therapy applications. The possible factors responsible for this contra-intuitive behavior are discussed and investigated. Finally, a reliable measurement protocol for comprehensive characterization of 2PA capability of different substances is proposed. Herewith an attempt to establish a standard method, which takes into account the concentration dependence, is made. This method provides means for faultless comparison of different compounds.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Commercial 3D Bioprinters
- Author
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Yusef D. Khesuani, F. D. A. S. Pereira, Vladimir Mironov, Vladislav A. Parfenov, and Aleksandr Ovsianikov
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Materials science ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0210 nano-technology - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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47. Metallo-Supramolecular Gels that are Photocleavable with Visible and Near-Infrared Irradiation
- Author
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Sabrina, Theis, Aitziber, Iturmendi, Christian, Gorsche, Marco, Orthofer, Markus, Lunzer, Stefan, Baudis, Aleksandr, Ovsianikov, Robert, Liska, Uwe, Monkowius, and Ian, Teasdale
- Subjects
caged compounds ,Communication ,Light‐Sensitive Gels ,two-photon absorption ,metallopolymers ,gels ,ruthenium ,Communications - Abstract
A photolabile ruthenium‐based complex, [Ru(bpy)2(4AMP)2](PF6)2, (4AMP=4‐(aminomethyl)pyridine) is incorporated into polyurea organo‐ and hydrogels via the reactive amine moieties on the photocleavable 4AMP ligands. While showing long‐term stability in the dark, cleavage of the pyridine–ruthenium bond upon irradiation with visible or near‐infrared irradiation (in a two‐photon process) leads to rapid de‐gelation of the supramolecular gels, thus enabling spatiotemporal micropatterning by photomasking or pulsed NIR‐laser irradiation
- Published
- 2017
48. Three-dimensional microfabrication of protein hydrogels via two-photon-excited thiol-vinyl ester photopolymerization
- Author
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Xiao-Hua Qin, Robert Saf, Heinz Redl, Robert Liska, Jan Torgersen, Jürgen Stampfl, Severin Mühleder, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Niklas Pucher, Wolfgang Holnthoner, and S. Clark Ligon
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Polymers and Plastics ,Vinyl ester ,macromolecular substances ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Gelatin ,vinyl ester ,gelatin ,food ,bovine serum albumin ,Polymer chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Copolymer ,Bovine serum albumin ,biology ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Macromonomer ,0104 chemical sciences ,two-photon polymerization ,Photopolymer ,Polymerization ,13. Climate action ,tissue engineering ,scaffolds ,photopolymerization ,Self-healing hydrogels ,biology.protein ,hydrogel ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Engineering three-dimensional (3D) hydrogels with well-defined architectures has become increasingly important for tissue engineering and basic research in biomaterials sci- ence. To fabricate 3D hydrogels with (sub)cellular-scale fea- tures, two-photon polymerization (2PP) shows great promise although the technique is limited by the selection of appropri- ate hydrogel precursors. In this study, we report the synthesis of gelatin hydrolysate vinyl esters (GH-VE) and its copolymer- ization with reduced derivatives of bovine serum albumin (acting as macrothiols). Photorheology of the thiol-ene copoly- merization shows a much more rapid onset of polymerization and a higher end modulus in reference to neat GH-VE. This allowed 2PP to provide well-defined and stable hydrogel microstructures. Efficiency of the radical-mediated thiol-vinyl ester photopolymerization allows high 2PP writing speed (as high as 50 mm s 21 ) with low laser power (as low as 20 mW). MTT assays indicate negligible cytotoxicities of the GH-VE macromers and of the thiol-ene hydrogel pellets. Osteosar- coma cells seeded onto GH-VE/BSA hydrogels with different macromer relative ratios showed a preference for hydrogels with higher percentage of GH-VE. This can be attributed both to a favorable modulus and preferable protein environment since gelatin favors cell adhesion and albumin incurs nonspe- cific binding. V C 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 2013, 51, 4799-4810
- Published
- 2013
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49. A biocompatible macromolecular two-photon initiator based on hyaluronan
- Author
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Marica Markovic, Arnulf Rosspeintner, Robert Liska, Heinz Redl, Peter M. Gruber, Aleksandr Ovsianikov, Eric Vauthey, and Maximilian Tromayer
- Subjects
food.ingredient ,Polymers and Plastics ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Gelatin ,Fluorescence ,0104 chemical sciences ,food ,Photopolymer ,Polymerization ,Chemical engineering ,Two-photon excitation microscopy ,Polymer chemistry ,ddc:540 ,0210 nano-technology ,Photoinitiator ,Macromolecule ,Microfabrication - Abstract
The possibility of the direct encapsulation of living cells via two-photon induced photopolymerization enables the microfabrication of hydrogel scaffolds with high initial cell loadings and intimate matrix-cell contact. While highly efficient water-soluble two-photon initiators based on benzylidene ketone dyes have been developed, they exhibit considerable cyto- and phototoxicity. To address the problem of photoinitiator migration from the extracellular matrix into the cytosol, a two-photon initiator bound to a polymeric hyaluronan backbone (HAPI) was synthesized in this work. HAPI exhibited a distinct improvement of cytocompatibility compared to a reference two-photon initiator. Basic photophysical investigations were performed to characterize the absorption and fluorescence behavior of HAPI. Laser scanning microscopy was used to visualize and confirm the hindered transmembrane migration behavior of HAPI. The performance of HAPI was tested in two-photon polymerization at exceedingly high printing speeds of 100 mm s-1 producing gelatin-based complex 3D hydrogel scaffolds with a water content of 85%. The photodamage of the structuring process was low and viable MC3T3 cells embedded in the gel were monitored for several days after structuring.
- Published
- 2017
50. Hydrogels for Two-Photon Polymerization: A Toolbox for Mimicking the Extracellular Matrix
- Author
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Jürgen Stampfl, Robert Liska, Jan Torgersen, Xiao-Hua Qin, Zhiquan Li, and Aleksandr Ovsianikov
- Subjects
Materials science ,Morphogenesis ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Two-Photon Polymerization ,Biomaterials ,Extracellular matrix ,Tissue engineering ,Two-photon excitation microscopy ,Electrochemistry ,microfabrication ,Photopolymerization ,Tissue Engineering ,Cell Culture ,Adhesion ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,0104 chemical sciences ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Extracellular Matrix ,Hydrogel ,Polymerization ,Cell culture ,Self-healing hydrogels ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The natural extracellular matrix (ECM) represents a complex and dynamic environment. It provides numerous spatio-temporal signals mediating many cellular functions including morphogenesis, adhesion, proliferation and differentiation. The cell–ECM interaction is bidirectional. Cells dynamically receive and process information from the ECM and remodel it at the same time. Theses complex interactions are still not fully understood. For better understanding, it is indispensable to deconstruct the ECM up to the point of investigating isolated characteristics and cell responses to physical, chemical and topographical cues. Two-photon polymerization (2PP) allows the exact reconstruction of cell specific sites in 3D at micro- and nanometer precision. Processing biocompatible synthetic and naturally-derived hydrogels, the microenvironment of cells can be designed to specifically investigate their behavior in respect to key chemical, mechanical and topographical attributes. Moreover, 3D manipulation can be performed in the presence of cells, guiding biological tissue formation in all stages of its development. Here, advances in 2PP microfabrication of synthetic and naturally based hydrogels are reviewed. Key components of photopolymerizable hydrogel precursors, their structure–property relationships and their polymerization mechanisms are presented. Furthermore, it is shown how biocompatible 2PP fabricated constructs can act as biologically relevant matrices to study cell functions and tissue development.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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