Abstract

Tissue engineering in the post-injury brain represents a promising option for cellular replacement and rescue, providing a cell scaffold for either transplanted or resident cells. We have characterized the use of methylcellulose (MC) as a scaffolding material, whose concentration and solvent were varied to manipulate its physical properties. MC solutions were produced to exhibit low viscosity at 23°C and form a soft gel at 37°C, thereby making MC attractive for minimally invasive procedures in vivo. Degradation and swelling studies in vitro demonstrated a small amount of initial polymer erosion followed by relative polymer stability over the 2-week period tested as well as increased hydrogel mass due to solvent uptake. Concentrations up to 8% did not elicit cell death in primary rat astrocytes or neurons at 1 or 7 days. Acellular 2% MC (30 μl) was microinjected into the brains of rats 1 week after cortical impact injury (velocity=3 m/s, depth=2 mm) and examined at 2 days ( n=8; n=3, vehicle injected) and 2 weeks ( n=5; n=3, vehicle injected). The presence of MC did not alter the size of the injury cavity or change the patterns of gliosis as compared to injured, vehicle-injected rats (detected using antibodies against GFAP and ED1). Collectively, these data indicate that MC is well suited as a biocompatible injectable scaffold for the repair of defects in the brain.

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