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Injectable 3D Hydrogel Scaffold with Tailorable Porosity Post-Implantation

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posted on 2024-07-26, 13:45 authored by Aswan Al-Abboodi, Jing Fu, Pauline DoranPauline Doran, Timothy T. Y. Tan, Peggy Chan
Since rates of tissue growth vary significantly between tissue types, and also between individuals due to differences in age, dietary intake, and lifestyle-related factors, engineering a scaffold system that is appropriate for personalized tissue engineering remains a significant challenge. In this study, a gelatin-hydroxyphenylpropionic acid/carboxylmethylcellulose-tyramine (Gtn-HPA/CMC-Tyr) porous hydrogel system that allows the pore structure of scaffolds to be altered in vivo after implantation is developed. Cross-linking of Gtn-HPA/CMC-Tyr hydrogels via horseradish peroxidase oxidative coupling is examined both in vitro and in vivo. Post-implantation, further alteration of the hydrogel structure is achieved by injecting cellulase enzyme to digest the CMC component of the scaffold; this treatment yields a structure with larger pores and higher porosity than hydrogels without cellulase injection. Using this approach, the pore sizes of scaffolds are altered in vivo from 32-87 μm to 74-181 μm in a user-controled manner. The hydrogel is biocompatible to COS-7 cells and has mechanical properties similar to those of soft tissues. The new hydrogel system developed in this work provides clinicians with the ability to tailor the structure of scaffolds post-implantation depending on the growth rate of a tissue or an individual's recovery rate, and could thus be ideal for personalized tissue engineering.

Funding

Engineering functional nerves using microtailored culture systems

Australian Research Council

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Investigation of capillarity and photonics for inexpensive and accurate electrophoresis instrumentation

Australian Research Council

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History

Available versions

PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

2192-2640

Journal title

Advanced Healthcare Materials

Volume

3

Issue

5

Pagination

11 pp

Publisher

Wiley

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag. This is the accepted version of the following article, 'Injectable 3D hydrogel scaffold with tailorable porosity post-implantation', which has been published in final form at http://doi.org/10.1002/adhm.201300303

Language

eng

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