1. Hierarchically Ordered Porous and High-Volume Polycaprolactone Microchannel Scaffolds Enhanced Axon Growth in Transected Spinal Cords
- Author
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Shahriari, Dena, Koffler, Jacob Y, Tuszynski, Mark H, Campana, Wendy M, and Sakamoto, Jeff S
- Subjects
Inbred F344 ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Polyesters ,nerve guidance scaffolds ,Neurosciences ,Biomedical Engineering ,Materials Engineering ,mechanical properties ,Regenerative Medicine ,Axons ,Rats ,Mice ,polycaprolactone ,NIH 3T3 Cells ,Animals ,Female ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,nerve regeneration ,Porosity ,controlled porosity ,Spinal Cord Injuries - Abstract
The goal of this work was to design nerve guidance scaffolds with a unique architecture to maximize the open volume available for nerve growth. Polycaprolactone (PCL) was selected as the scaffold material based on its biocompatibility and month-long degradation. Yet, dense PCL does not exhibit suitable properties such as porosity, stiffness, strength, and cell adhesion to function as an effective nerve guidance scaffold. To address these shortcomings, PCL was processed using a modified salt-leaching technique to create uniquely controlled interconnected porosity. By controlling porosity, we demonstrated that the elastic modulus could be controlled between 2.09 and 182.1 MPa. In addition, introducing porosity and/or coating with fibronectin enhanced the PCL cell attachment properties. To produce PCL scaffolds with maximized open volume, porous PCL microtubes were fabricated and translated into scaffolds with 60 volume percent open volume. The scaffolds were tested in transected rat spinal cords. Linear axon growth within both the microtubes as well as the interstitial space between the tubes was observed, demonstrating that the entire open volume of the scaffold was available for nerve growth. Overall, a novel scaffold architecture and fabrication technique are presented. The scaffolds exhibit significantly higher volume than state-of-the-art scaffolds for promising spinal cord nerve repair.
- Published
- 2017