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Additive manufactured, highly resilient, elastic, and biodegradable poly(ester)urethane scaffolds with chondroinductive properties for cartilage tissue engineering
- Source :
- Materials Today Bio, Materials today. Bio, 6:100051. Elsevier BV, Materials Today Bio, Vol 6, Iss, Pp 100051-(2020)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Articular cartilage was thought to be one of the first tissues to be successfully engineered. Despite the avascular and non-innervated nature of the tissue, the cells within articular cartilage – chondrocytes – account for a complex phenotype that is difficult to be maintained in vitro. The use of bone marrow–derived stromal cells (BMSCs) has emerged as a potential solution to this issue. Differentiation of BMSCs toward stable and non-hypertrophic chondrogenic phenotypes has also proved to be challenging. Moreover, hyaline cartilage presents a set of mechanical properties – relatively high Young's modulus, elasticity, and resilience – that are difficult to reproduce. Here, we report on the use of additive manufactured biodegradable poly(ester)urethane (PEU) scaffolds of two different structures (500 μm pore size and 90° or 60° deposition angle) that can support the loads applied onto the knee while being highly resilient, with a permanent deformation lower than 1% after 10 compression-relaxation cycles. Moreover, these scaffolds appear to promote BMSC differentiation, as shown by the deposition of glycosaminoglycans and collagens (in particular collagen II). At gene level, BMSCs showed an upregulation of chondrogenic markers, such as collagen II and the Sox trio, to higher or similar levels than that of traditional pellet cultures, with a collagen II/collagen I relative expression of 2–3, depending on the structure of the scaffold. Moreover, scaffolds with different pore architectures influenced the differentiation process and the final BMSC phenotype. These data suggest that additive manufactured PEU scaffolds could be good candidates for cartilage tissue regeneration in combination with microfracture interventions.<br />Graphical abstract Image 1
- Subjects :
- Scaffold
HYDROGELS
Biomedical Engineering
Bioengineering
02 engineering and technology
ARCHITECTURES
010402 general chemistry
01 natural sciences
Bioresorbable
MESENCHYMAL STEM-CELLS
Biomaterials
Glycosaminoglycan
Fused deposition modelling
REGENERATION
Full Length Article
medicine
lcsh:QH301-705.5
Molecular Biology
lcsh:R5-920
Stem cell
Chemistry
Hyaline cartilage
Cartilage
Regeneration (biology)
Mesenchymal stem cell
Cell Biology
ARTICULAR-CARTILAGE
MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES
DEGRADATION
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Chondrogenesis
POLYURETHANE SCAFFOLDS
0104 chemical sciences
medicine.anatomical_structure
DIFFERENTIATION
lcsh:Biology (General)
Self-healing hydrogels
Tissue regeneration
lcsh:Medicine (General)
0210 nano-technology
BONE
Biotechnology
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 25900064
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Materials Today Bio
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7800f9ce8ff8860859877bb00bf3676f
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mtbio.2020.100051