Abstract

As one of the most abundant, multifunctional biological polymers, polysaccharides are considered promising materials to prepare tissue engineering scaffolds. When properly designed, wetted porous scaffolds can have biomechanics similar to living tissue and provide suitable fluid transport, both of which are key features for in vitro and in vivo tissue growth. They can further mimic the components and function of glycosaminoglycans found in the extracellular matrix of tissues. In this study, we investigate scaffolds formed by charge complexation between anionic carboxymethyl cellulose and cationic protonated chitosan under well-controlled conditions. Freeze-drying and dehydrothermal heat treatment were then used to obtain porous materials with exceptional, unprecendent mechanical properties and dimensional long-term stability in cell growth media. We investigated how complexation conditions, charge ratio, and heat treatment significantly influence the resulting fluid uptake and biomechanics. Surprisingly, materials with high compressive strength, high elastic modulus, and significant shape recovery are obtained under certain conditions. We address this mostly to a balanced charge ratio and the formation of covalent amide bonds between the polymers without the use of additional cross-linkers. The scaffolds promoted clustered cell adhesion and showed no cytotoxic effects as assessed by cell viability assay and live/dead staining with human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells. We suggest that similar scaffolds or biomaterials comprising other polysaccharides have a large potential for cartilage tissue engineering and that elucidating the reason for the observed peculiar biomechanics can stimulate further research.

Highlights

  • Three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds are considered as biomaterials for tissue engineering to support the biological functions of damaged tissues and organs.[1]

  • We assumed that the cross-linking reactions occurred between the hydroxyl and carboxyl or amino and carboxyl groups of the chitosan and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) polymer chains

  • We report on the influence of the charge ratio and heat treatment on the mechanical properties and stability of polysaccharide charge complexes

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds are considered as biomaterials for tissue engineering to support the biological functions of damaged tissues and organs.[1]. Scaffolds based on CMC and CS have been prepared via polyelectrolyte charge complexation (PEC) followed by freezedrying[11] and reported for tissue engineering applications.[13,29] Even though they can be fabricated via PEC, most products lack dimensional stability or load-bearing capacity in biological environments under physiological conditions (37 °C, pH 7.4). DHT is solvent-free and frequently employed to improve the mechanical properties of biomaterials such as collagen.[34,35] to date, no detailed studies have been reported on the influence of the charge ratio and subsequent heat treatment on the properties of scaffolds fabricated from the PEC of CS and CMC. Solvent- and chemical-free DHT treatment was employed to cross-link the functional groups of the polymers, which has not been previously reported in the literature for PESs CS/CMC scaffolds (see Figure 1). The suitability of the scaffolds for tissue engineering was evaluated based on the viability and proliferation of human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)

EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
■ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
■ REFERENCES
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