| Literature DB >> 30247815 |
Shue Li1,2, John Nicholas Poche3, Yiming Liu2, Thomas Scherr4, Jacob McCann2, Anoosha Forghani2, Mollie Smoak5, Mitchell Muir6, Lisa Berntsen2, Cong Chen2, Dino J Ravnic7, Jeffrey Gimble8, Daniel J Hayes2.
Abstract
Hydrogels are promising scaffolds for adipose tissue regeneration. Currently, the incorporation of bioactive molecules in hydrogel system is used, which can increase the cell proliferation rate or improve adipogenic differentiation performance of stromal stem cells but often suffers from high expense or cytotoxicity because of light/thermal curing used for polymerization. In this study, decellularized adipose tissue is incorporated, at varying concentrations, with a thiol-acrylate fraction that is then polymerized to produce hydrogels via a Michael addition reaction. The results reveal that the major component of isolated adipose-derived extracellular matrix (ECM) is Collagen I. Mechanical properties of ECM polyethylene glycol (PEG) are not negatively affected by the incorporation of ECM. Additionally, human adipose-derived stem cells (hASCs) are encapsulated in ECM PEG hydrogel with ECM concentrations varying from 0% to 1%. The results indicate that hASCs maintained the highest viability and proliferation rate in 1% ECM PEG hydrogel with most lipids formation when cultured in adipogenic conditions. Furthermore, more adipose regeneration is observed in 1% ECM group with in vivo study by Day 14 compared to other ECM PEG hydrogels with lower ECM content. Taken together, these findings suggest the ECM PEG hydrogel is a promising substitute for adipose tissue regeneration applications.Entities:
Keywords: adipogenesis; adipose; extracellular matrix; hydrogel; regeneration
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30247815 PMCID: PMC6326578 DOI: 10.1002/mabi.201800122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Macromol Biosci ISSN: 1616-5187 Impact factor: 4.979