| Literature DB >> 33803598 |
Britani N Blackstone1, Summer C Gallentine2, Heather M Powell1,2,3.
Abstract
Collagen is a key component of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in organs and tissues throughout the body and is used for many tissue engineering applications. Electrospinning of collagen can produce scaffolds in a wide variety of shapes, fiber diameters and porosities to match that of the native ECM. This systematic review aims to pool data from available manuscripts on electrospun collagen and tissue engineering to provide insight into the connection between source material, solvent, crosslinking method and functional outcomes. D-banding was most often observed in electrospun collagen formed using collagen type I isolated from calfskin, often isolated within the laboratory, with short solution solubilization times. All physical and chemical methods of crosslinking utilized imparted resistance to degradation and increased strength. Cytotoxicity was observed at high concentrations of crosslinking agents and when abbreviated rinsing protocols were utilized. Collagen and collagen-based scaffolds were capable of forming engineered tissues in vitro and in vivo with high similarity to the native structures.Entities:
Keywords: collagen; electrospinning; tissue engineering
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803598 PMCID: PMC8003061 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering8030039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Flow-through diagram for literature search and inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Figure 2Distribution of collagen sources utilized in the study cohort for electrospinning.
Figure 3(A) SEM image of a scaffold electrospun from calfskin collagen type I solubilized in 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFP). (B) TEM image of an individual electrospun collagen fiber exhibiting D-banding. Modified from [22] with permission.
Assessment of D-banding in scaffolds electrospun collagen scaffolds.
| Origin | Source | Solvent | Ultrastructure | Solution Injection Rate | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calfskin | Extracted in-house | HFP | D-banding observed via TEM | 3–7 mL/h | [ |
| Calfskin | Sigma-Aldrich | HFP | D-banding observed via TEM | 5 mL/h | [ |
| Calfskin | Sigma-Aldrich | HFP | D-banding observed via AFM | 0.5–1.5 mL/h | [ |
| Calfskin | Sigma-Aldrich | HFP | D-banding observed via TEM | 2–8 mL/h | [ |
| Fish-derived collagen type I | Medira Ltd. | Acetic Acid: DMSO (93:7) | D-banding observed via TEM | 0.6 mL/h | [ |
| Calfskin | Extracted in-house | HFP | D-banding observed via TEM | Not reported | [ |
| Porcine dermis | Extracted in-house | HFP | Maintenance of structure via circular dichroism | 0.2 mL/h | [ |
| Source not listed | Sichuan Ming-rang Bio-Tech Co. Ltd. | HFP | No D-banding observed via XRD | 0.8 mL/h | [ |
| Bovine dermis (soluble) | Kensey Nash Corporation | HFP | No D-banding observed via TEM | 4 mL/h | [ |
| Tilapia skin | Extracted in-house | HFP | No maintenance of structure observed via circular dichroism | 1.0 mL/h | [ |
Crosslinking methods for collagen and collagen-based electrospun scaffolds.
| Crosslinker | Delivery | Solvent | Exposure/Concentration | Treatment Time | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argon laser | Irradiation | - | 514 nm, 226 mW, spot size of d = 2 cm at RT | 100 s | [ |
| BDDGE | Immersion | Ethanol | 5% | 7 days at 37 °C | [ |
| CaCl2 + | CaCl2 in situ, (NH4)2CO3
| - | 20 mM Ca2+, 5 g (NH4)2CO3 in desiccator at RT | 24 h | [ |
| Citric Acid (+/− glycerol) | In situ | - | 5 wt % of collagen wt +/− 3% glycerol at RT | - | [ |
| DHT | Environmental | - | Vacuum at 140 °C | 24 h | [ |
| EDC | Immersion | 90–100% Ethanol | 5–200 mM, 5 | 4 h–7 days | [ |
| EDC+NHS | Immersion | 90–100% Ethanol, 90% | 30–600 mM EDC, 10–600 mM NHS at 4 °C—RT | 4 h–24 h | [ |
| Genipin | Immersion | 90–100% Ethanol, 90% | 3.5–30 mM, 0.5–10 | 24 h–5 days | [ |
| Glutaraldehyde | Vapor | - | 0.5–50 | 15 min–3 days | [ |
| Glutaraldehyde | Immersion | 1X PBS, Distilled Water, | 0.25–40 | 1–19 h | [ |
| HMDI,1,6-diisocyanatohexane | Immersion | Isopropanol | 10 | 2 h | [ |
| Phosphoric Acid | Vapor | - | - | 24 h | [ |
| Quaternary ammonium organosilane (QOS) + Ammonium carbonate | QOS in situ, (NH4)2CO3 environmental | - | 0.1–10 | 48 h for (NH4)2CO3 | [ |
| Thermal | Environmental | - | 150°C | 1.5–2.5 h | [ |
| Transglutaminase | Immersion | Phosphate buffer | 5000:1 | Overnight | [ |
| UV | Irradiation | - | 365 nm UVA (3 mW/cm2,d = 50mm, with 0.1% riboflavin), 254 nm, 253.7 nm (30 W) | 30 min–1 h | [ |
Figure 4(A) Type of collagen-based electrospun scaffolds; (B) distribution of materials combined with collagen in electrospun scaffolds.
Figure 5Confocal images of pure collagen (red) (A) and collagen (red)-polycaprolactone (PCL) (green) blend electrospun fibers (C) showing the segregation of the collagen and PCL components at a total PCL concentration of 30% total polymer mass. Scale bar = 7 µm. These large gelatin and PCL domains within the fiber reduced the ability of the collagen-PCL blend to support the formation of a well-stratified engineered skin (D) (blue = DAPI, red= collagen IV, green = involucrin) despite improvements to acellular scaffold strength and resistance to degradation. Pure collagen scaffolds support the development of bilayered engineered skin with a stratified epidermis (B). Modified from [75] with permission.