Abstract

This work reports a rational design of injectable thermosensitive chitosan systems for cell encapsulation and delivery. Using mixtures of two phosphate salts, beta-glycerophosphate and ammonium hydrogen phosphate, we demonstrate that the pH and the osmolarity can be adjusted separately by varying the molar ratios between the salts and the d-glucosamine monomers. We found the existence of a critical temperature above which gelation time decays following a power-law. This gelation kinetics can be finely tuned through the pH and salt-glucosamine ratios. Formulations having physiological pH and osmolarity were produced for chitosan concentrations ranging from 0.4 to 0.9 wt%. They remain liquid for more than 2 h at 20 °C and form a macroporous gel within 2 min at 37 °C. In vitro encapsulation of pre-osteoblastic cells and gingival fibroblasts showed homogeneous cell distribution and good cell viability up to 24 h. Such an approach provides a valuable platform to design thermosensitive cell-laden systems.

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