Magnetic nanoparticle-loaded alginate beads for local micro-actuation of in vitro tissue constructs

[Display omitted] •Iron oxide nanoparticles loaded into alginate beads confer magnetic properties.•A glutaraldehyde-treated chitosan coating prevents nanoparticle leakage from beads.•Magnetic alginate beads actuate collagen hydrogels under external magnetic control.•This constitutes a method to stud...

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Veröffentlicht in:Colloids and surfaces, B, Biointerfaces B, Biointerfaces, 2017-11, Vol.159, p.945-955
Hauptverfasser: Alshehri, Awatef M., Wilson, Otto C., Dahal, Bishnu, Philip, John, Luo, Xiaolong, Raub, Christopher B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Iron oxide nanoparticles loaded into alginate beads confer magnetic properties.•A glutaraldehyde-treated chitosan coating prevents nanoparticle leakage from beads.•Magnetic alginate beads actuate collagen hydrogels under external magnetic control.•This constitutes a method to study the mechanobiology of in vitro constructs.•The force loading occurs on the same spatial scale as large tumor spheroids. Magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) self-align and transduce magnetic force, two properties which lead to promising applications in cell and tissue engineering. However, the toxicity of MNPs to cells which uptake them is a major impediment to applications in engineered tissue constructs. To address this problem, MNPs were embedded in millimeter-scale alginate beads, coated with glutaraldehyde cross-linked chitosan, and loaded in acellular and MDA-MB-231 cancer cell-seeded collagen hydrogels, providing local micro-actuation under an external magnetic field. Brightfield microscopy was used to assess nanoparticle diffusion from the bead. Phase contrast microscopy and digital image correlation were used to track collagen matrix displacement and estimate intratissue strain under magnetic actuation. Coating the magnetic alginate beads with glutaraldehyde-chitosan prevents bulk diffusion of nanoparticles into the surrounding microenvironment. Further, the beads exert force on the surrounding collagen gel and cells, resulting in intratissue strains of 0–10% tunable with bead dimensions, collagen density, and distance from the bead. Cells seeded adjacent to the embedded beads are subjected to strain gradients without loss of cell viability over two days culture. This study describes a simple way to fabricate crosslinked magnetic alginate beads to load in a collagen tissue construct without direct exposure of the construct to nanoparticles. The findings are significant to in vitro studies of mechanobiology in enabling precise control over dynamic mechanical loading of tissue constructs.
ISSN:0927-7765
1873-4367
DOI:10.1016/j.colsurfb.2017.08.062