Cellulose-based porous scaffold for bone tissue engineering applications: Assessment of hMSC proliferation and differentiation
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
Physical foaming combined with microwaveinduced
curing was used in this study to develop an innovative
device for bone tissue regeneration. In the first step of
the process, a stable physical foaming was induced using a
surfactant (i.e. pluronic) as blowing agent of a homogeneous
blend of Sodium salt of carboxymethylcellulose (CMCNa)
and polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA700) solution. In
the second step, the porous structure of the scaffold was
chemically stabilized by radical polymerization induced by a
homogeneous rapid heating of the sample in a microwave
reactor. In this step 2,2-Azobis[2-(2-imidazolin-2 yl)propane]-
Dihydrochloride was used as thermoinitiator (TI). CMCNa and
PEGDA were mixed with different blends to correlate the
properties of final product with the composition. The chemical
properties of each sample were evaluated by spectroscopy
analysis ATR-IR (before and after curing) in order to
maximize reaction yield, and optimize kinetic parameters (i.e.
time curing, microwave power). The stability of the materials
was evaluated in vitro by degradation test in Phosphate Buffered
Saline. Biological analyses were performed to evaluate
the effect of scaffold materials on cellular behavior in terms
of proliferation and early osteogenic differentiation of human
Mesenchymal Stem Cells.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
scaffold; porous materials; cellulose; tissue engineering; human mesenchymal stem cells
List of contributors:
Giugliano, Daniela; Ambrosio, Luigi; Raucci, MARIA GRAZIA
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