| Literature DB >> 25649518 |
K M Pawelec1, A Husmann, R J Wardale, S M Best, R E Cameron.
Abstract
The structure of ice-templated collagen scaffolds is sensitive to many factors. By adding 0.5 wt% of sodium chloride or sucrose to collagen slurries, scaffold structure could be tuned through changes in ice growth kinetics and interactions of the solute and collagen. With ionic solutes (sodium chloride) the entanglements of the collagen molecule decreased, leading to fibrous scaffolds with increased pore size and decreased attachment of chondrocytes. With non-ionic solutes (sucrose) ice growth was slowed, leading to significantly reduced pore size and up-regulated cell attachment. This highlights the large changes in structure and biological function stimulated by solutes in ice-templating systems.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25649518 PMCID: PMC4381095 DOI: 10.1007/s10856-015-5457-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Sci Mater Med ISSN: 0957-4530 Impact factor: 3.896
Fig. 1Collagen scaffold structure and the rheological properties of the slurry were affected by solute additions. Addition of 0.5 wt% NaCl changed the conformation of the collagen, altering a the viscosity of the slurry, and b the storage (G′) and elastic moduli (G″). Collagen scaffold structure with c no solute addition, d 0.5 wt% sucrose, and e 5 wt% sucrose and f 0.5 wt% NaCl; scale bar is 100 μm. The fibrillar structure of scaffolds with 0.5 wt% NaCl is clearly visible at higher magnification g ×400 and h ×3,300
Fig. 2Addition of solutes to the collagen slurry altered the biological activity. a Metabolic activity of chondrocytes, measured via an alamarBlue® assay, did not vary significantly. b Cell number was significantly impacted by solutes. c Protein expression of fibronectin, assessed using western blotting, with GAPDH expression below as a control; A cartilage tissue, B no additives, C 0.5 wt% NaCl, D 0.5 wt% sucrose. Significantly greater than all other samples (*P < 0.05). Significantly lower than all other samples (# P < 0.05)