Abstract

Tissues are organized in hierarchical structures comprised of nanoscale, microscale, and macroscale features. Incorporating hierarchical structures into biomaterial scaffolds may enable better resemblance of native tissue structures and improve cell interaction, but it is challenging to produce such scaffolds using a single conventional scaffold production technique. We developed the Freeze-FRESH (FF) technique that combines FRESH 3D printing (3DP) and freeze-casting to produce 3D printed scaffolds with microscale pores in the struts. FF scaffolds were produced by extrusion 3DP using a support bath at room temperature, followed by freezing and lyophilization, then the FF scaffolds were recovered from the bath and crosslinked. The FF scaffolds had a hierarchical pore structure from the combination of microscale pores throughout the scaffold struts and macroscale pores in the printed design, while control scaffolds had only macroscale pores. FF scaffolds frozen at −20 °C and −80 °C had similar pore sizes, due to freezing in the support bath. The −20 °C and −80 °C FF scaffolds had porous struts with 63.55% ± 2.59% and 56.72% ± 13.17% strut porosity, respectively, while control scaffolds had a strut porosity of 3.15% ± 2.20%. The −20 °C and −80 °C FF scaffolds were softer than control scaffolds: they had pore wall stiffness of 0.17 ± 0.06 MPa and 0.23 ± 0.05 MPa, respectively, compared to 1.31 ± 0.39 MPa for the control. The FF scaffolds had increased resilience in bending compared with control. FF scaffolds supported MDA-MB-231 cell growth and had significantly greater cell numbers than control scaffolds. Cells formed clusters on the porous struts of FF scaffolds and had similar morphologies as the freeze cast scaffolds. The FF technique successfully introduced microscale porosity into the 3DP scaffold struts to produce hierarchical pore structures that enhanced MDA-MB-231 growth.

Highlights

  • Tissues have hierarchical structures comprised of components that span multiple length scales.Bone is an example of a tissue with hierarchical structure, as it has features that range from nanoscale bone mineral crystals to macroscopic features in cortical bone [1]

  • We reported the development of Freeze-freeform reversible embedding of suspended hydrogels (FRESH), a 3D printing (3DP) technique that incorporates freeze-casting with the FRESH 3DP method to produce scaffolds with microscale pores throughout the scaffold struts

  • Scaffolds produced with FF method had a hierarchical pore structure due to the macroscale pores in the printed structure and microscale pores in the struts

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Summary

Introduction

Tissues have hierarchical structures comprised of components that span multiple length scales. Bone is an example of a tissue with hierarchical structure, as it has features that range from nanoscale bone mineral crystals to macroscopic features in cortical bone [1]. Biomaterial scaffolds are produced in many different formats using a variety of methods in an attempt to replicate tissue structures. The scaffold structure and stiffness influence the cell response through cell adhesion, cell–matrix interaction, and mechanotransduction [2,3]. Many biomaterial scaffolds have features at a single length scale, not hierarchical structures consisting of features on multiple length scales. Scaffolds with hierarchical structures may better resemble biological tissues and have been demonstrated to enhance cell function [4,5,6]

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