Abstract

As a major component of extracellular matrixes (ECMs), collagen is an attractive biomaterial to fabricate porous scaffold for tissue engineering due to their similarity to the in vivo static microenvironment. However, the collagen-based porous scaffolds were difficult to mimic the dynamically remolded porous structure of ECM during the cell proliferation and tissue development, and always have poor mechanical property and not easy to handle. Here, natural collagen and partially denatured collagen was used to prepare the stepwise degradable hybrid bioscaffold with suitable mechanical property and dynamically remolded inner porous structure, which is desirable for the applications of tissue engineering. The collagen-based microporous scaffold was first prepared and used as physical support, then, the mechanical strength of which was reinforced by the import of the partially denatured collagen to give the hybrid bioscaffold. The fabrication conditions of the hybrid scaffolds were optimized, of which the thermal stability, mechanical property, and swelling property was explored. The stepwise enzymatic degradation process and the corresponding porous structure variation of the hybrid scaffold was confirmed by SEM and cell culture assays.

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