| Literature DB >> 25761231 |
Jelena Rnjak-Kovacina1,2, Teresa M DesRochers1,3, Kelly A Burke1,4, David L Kaplan5.
Abstract
The effects of common sterilization techniques on the physical and biological properties of lyophilized silk fibroin sponges are described. Sterile silk fibroin sponges were cast using a pre-sterilized silk fibroin solution under aseptic conditions or post-sterilized via autoclaving, γ radiation, dry heat, exposure to ethylene oxide, or hydrogen peroxide gas plasma. Low average molecular weight and low concentration silk fibroin solutions could be sterilized via autoclaving or filtration without significant loses of protein. However, autoclaving reduced the molecular weight distribution of the silk fibroin protein solution, and silk fibroin sponges cast from autoclaved silk fibroin were significantly stiffer compared to sponges cast from unsterilized or filtered silk fibroin. When silk fibroin sponges were sterilized post-casting, autoclaving increased scaffold stiffness, while decreasing scaffold degradation rate in vitro. In contrast, γ irradiation accelerated scaffold degradation rate. Exposure to ethylene oxide significantly decreased cell proliferation rate on silk fibroin sponges, which was rescued by leaching ethylene oxide into PBS prior to cell seeding.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterial; scaffolds; silk fibroin; sterilization; tissue engineering
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25761231 PMCID: PMC4456215 DOI: 10.1002/mabi.201500013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Macromol Biosci ISSN: 1616-5187 Impact factor: 4.979