Preparing printable bacterial cellulose based gelatin gel to promote in vivo bone regeneration

The naturally tight entanglement of fibers in bacterial cellulose (BC) results in low printability when BC is used as a bioink for printing scaffolds. In this study, neat BC was treated by TEMPO-mediated oxidation (TO-BC) and maleic acid (MA-BC) to prepare homogeneous BC dispersions to fabricate sca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Carbohydrate polymers 2021-10, Vol.270, p.118342-118342, Article 118342
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xucai, Tang, Shijia, Chai, Senlin, Wang, Peng, Qin, Jianghui, Pei, Wenhui, Bian, Huiyang, Jiang, Qing, Huang, Caoxing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The naturally tight entanglement of fibers in bacterial cellulose (BC) results in low printability when BC is used as a bioink for printing scaffolds. In this study, neat BC was treated by TEMPO-mediated oxidation (TO-BC) and maleic acid (MA-BC) to prepare homogeneous BC dispersions to fabricate scaffolds for bone regeneration. Results showed that the treatments released individual fibrils in the corresponding uniform dispersions without impairing inherent crystalline properties. Compared with TO-BC, MA-BC hybridized with gelatin could endow the gel with improved rheological properties and compression modulus for 3D printing. Both TO-BC and MA-BC dispersions showed good osteoblast viability. However, MA-BC possessed more pronounced ability to express osteogenic marker genes and formation of mineralized nodules in vitro. Compared with TO-BC-based gelatin scaffolds, MA-BC-based gelatin scaffolds showed a better ability to stimulate the regeneration of rat calvaria, demonstrating a higher bone mineral density of newly formed bone and trabecular thickness in vivo. •TEMPO and MA treatments can liberate individual fibrils in BC dispersion.•MA treated BC endows gelatin with better compression modulus for 3D printing.•MA treated BC shows best performance for bone regeneration in vitro and in vivo.
ISSN:0144-8617
1879-1344
DOI:10.1016/j.carbpol.2021.118342