Additive-Free Gelatine-Based Devices for Chondral Tissue Regeneration: Shaping Process Comparison among Mould Casting and Three-Dimensional Printing.

3D printing biopolymers cartilage chondral regeneration mould casting tissue engineering

Journal

Polymers
ISSN: 2073-4360
Titre abrégé: Polymers (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101545357

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 Mar 2022
Historique:
received: 10 12 2021
revised: 12 02 2022
accepted: 02 03 2022
entrez: 10 3 2022
pubmed: 11 3 2022
medline: 11 3 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Gelatine is a well-known and extensively studied biopolymer, widely used in recent decades to create biomaterials in many different ways, exploiting its molecular resemblance with collagen, the main constituent of the extra-cellular matrix, from which it is derived. Many have employed this biopolymer in tissue engineering and chemically modified (e.g., gelatin methacryloyl) or blended it with other polymers (e.g., alginate) to modulate or increase its performances and printability. Nevertheless, little is reported about its use as a stand-alone material. Moreover, despite the fact that multiple works have been reported on the realization of mould-casted and three-dimensional printed scaffolds in tissue engineering, a clear comparison among these two shaping processes, towards a comparable workflow starting from the same material, has never been published. Herein, we report the use of gelatine as stand-alone material, not modified, blended, or admixed to be processed or crosslinked, for the realization of suitable scaffolds for tissue engineering, towards the two previously mentioned shaping processes. To make the comparison reliable, the same pre-process (e.g., the gelatin solution preparation) and post-process (e.g., freeze-drying and crosslinking) steps were applied. In this study, gelatine solution was firstly rheologically characterized to find a formulation suitable for being processed with both the shaping processes selected. The realized scaffolds were then morphologically, phisico-chemically, mechanically, and biologically characterized to determine and compare their performances. Despite the fact that the same starting material was employed, as well as the same pre- and post-process steps, the two groups resulted, for most aspects, in diametrically opposed characteristics. The mould-casted scaffolds that resulted were characterized by small, little-interconnected, and random porosity, high resistance to compression and slow cell colonization, while the three-dimensional printed scaffolds displayed big, well-interconnected, and geometrically defined porosity, high elasticity and recover ability after compression, as well as fast and deep cell colonization.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35267859
pii: polym14051036
doi: 10.3390/polym14051036
pmc: PMC8915043
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

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Auteurs

Margherita Montanari (M)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Alex Sangiorgi (A)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Elisabetta Campodoni (E)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Giada Bassi (G)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Davide Gardini (D)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Monica Montesi (M)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Silvia Panseri (S)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Alessandra Sanson (A)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Anna Tampieri (A)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Monica Sandri (M)

Institute of Science and Technology for Ceramics, National Research Council (CNR), 48018 Faenza, Italy.

Classifications MeSH