New Visible-Light Photoinitiating System for Improved Print Fidelity in Gelatin-Based Bioinks

Oxygen inhibition is a phenomenon that directly impacts the print fidelity of 3D biofabricated and photopolymerized hydrogel constructs. It typically results in the undesirable physical collapse of fabricated constructs due to impaired cross-linking, and is an issue that generally remains unreported...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS biomaterials science & engineering 2016-10, Vol.2 (10), p.1752-1762
Hauptverfasser: Lim, Khoon S, Schon, Benjamin S, Mekhileri, Naveen V, Brown, Gabriella C. J, Chia, Catherine M, Prabakar, Sujay, Hooper, Gary J, Woodfield, Tim B. F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Oxygen inhibition is a phenomenon that directly impacts the print fidelity of 3D biofabricated and photopolymerized hydrogel constructs. It typically results in the undesirable physical collapse of fabricated constructs due to impaired cross-linking, and is an issue that generally remains unreported in the literature. In this study, we describe a systematic approach to minimizing oxygen inhibition in photopolymerized gelatin-methacryloyl (Gel-MA)-based hydrogel constructs, by comparing a new visible-light initiating system, Vis + ruthenium (Ru)/sodium persulfate (SPS) to more conventionally adopted ultraviolet (UV) + Irgacure 2959 system. For both systems, increasing photoinitiator concentration and light irradiation intensity successfully reduced oxygen inhibition. However, the UV + I2959 system was detrimental to cells at both high I2959 concentrations and UV light irradiation intensities. The Vis + Ru/SPS system yielded better cell cyto-compatibility, where encapsulated cells remained >85% viable even at high Ru/SPS concentrations and visible-light irradiation intensities for up to 21 days, further highlighting the potential of this system to biofabricate cell-laden constructs with high shape fidelity, cell viability, and metabolic activity.
ISSN:2373-9878
2373-9878
DOI:10.1021/acsbiomaterials.6b00149