| Literature DB >> 34883702 |
Mahshid Hafezi1, Saied Nouri Khorasani1, Mohadeseh Zare2, Rasoul Esmaeely Neisiany3, Pooya Davoodi4,5.
Abstract
Cartilage is a tension- and load-bearing tissue and has a limited capacity for intrinsic self-healing. While microfracture and arthroplasty are the conventional methods for cartilage repair, these methods are unable to completely heal the damaged tissue. The need to overcome the restrictions of these therapies for cartilage regeneration has expanded the field of cartilage tissue engineering (CTE), in which novel engineering and biological approaches are introduced to accelerate the development of new biomimetic cartilage to replace the injured tissue. Until now, a wide range of hydrogels and cell sources have been employed for CTE to either recapitulate microenvironmental cues during a new tissue growth or to compel the recovery of cartilaginous structures via manipulating biochemical and biomechanical properties of the original tissue. Towards modifying current cartilage treatments, advanced hydrogels have been designed and synthesized in recent years to improve network crosslinking and self-recovery of implanted scaffolds after damage in vivo. This review focused on the recent advances in CTE, especially self-healing hydrogels. The article firstly presents the cartilage tissue, its defects, and treatments. Subsequently, introduces CTE and summarizes the polymeric hydrogels and their advances. Furthermore, characterizations, the advantages, and disadvantages of advanced hydrogels such as multi-materials, IPNs, nanomaterials, and supramolecular are discussed. Afterward, the self-healing hydrogels in CTE, mechanisms, and the physical and chemical methods for the synthesis of such hydrogels for improving the reformation of CTE are introduced. The article then briefly describes the fabrication methods in CTE. Finally, this review presents a conclusion of prevalent challenges and future outlooks for self-healing hydrogels in CTE applications.Entities:
Keywords: articular cartilage; polymeric hydrogels; self-healing; tissue engineering
Year: 2021 PMID: 34883702 PMCID: PMC8659862 DOI: 10.3390/polym13234199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1A timeline for the most important developments in the history of cartilage repairing with focus on hydrogel-based CTE. Reproduced with permission from Refs. [16,17].
Figure 2(A) Cartilage tissue component and its types in the human body; (B) main layer of hyaline cartilage tissue. Reproduced with permission from Refs. [3,22].
Mechanical and biological properties of natural articular cartilage.
| Mechanical Property | Value | Test Method | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aggregate modulus (MPa) | 0.10–2.1 | Confined compression | [ |
| Hydraulic permeability (m2/Pa.s) | 10−16–10−15 | Unconfined compression, indentation | [ |
| Compressive Young’s modulus (MPa) | 0.23–0.85 | Unconfined compression | [ |
| Poisson’s ratio | 0.05–0.30 | Unconfined compression | [ |
| Tensile equilibrium modulus (MPa) | 5.0–12.0 | Tensile stress relaxation | [ |
| Tensile Young’s modulus (MPa) | 5.0–25.0 | Tensile constant strain rate | [ |
| Tensile strength (MPa) | 0.7–25.0 | Equilibrium shear | [ |
| Equilibrium shear modulus (MPa) | 0.05–0.40 | Equilibrium shear | [ |
| Complex shear modulus (MPa) | 0.2–2.5 | Dynamic shear | [ |
| Shear loss angle (°) | 10–15 | Dynamic shear | [ |
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| Initial cell seeding | ≥63 million cells/mL | [ | |
| Osmolality | Physiological osmolality | [ | |
| Extracellular pH | 7–8 | [ | |
| Pore size | 2.5–6.5 nm | [ | |
| Growth factors | PDGF, TGF-β, FGF, BMP, IGF | [ | |
| Mechanical loading (dynamic compression) | 2–10% strain or 0.5–1.0 MPa at physiological frequency 0.01 to 1.0 Hz | [ | |
Figure 3Schematic representation of different biopolymers used for CTE.
Summary of the last 10 years studies on cartilage regeneration via biopolymers.
| Main Base | Main Materials | Advantages | Highlighted | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan | Chitosan, kartogenin | Increased mechanical | Significant statistical models to predict the properties | Immunogenic | [ |
| Gellan gum (GG)/nanoparticles/graphene oxide/hydroxyethyl cellulose/dialdehyde starch/ | Controllable properties, degradation rate, | [ | |||
| Chitosan, Pyrrole | Good thermo-sensitive gelation | High gelation time, | [ | ||
| Chitosan, PLA, calcium | - | Bioinert | [ | ||
| Collagen/gelatin | hyaluronic acid/dialdehyde micro fibrillated cellulose (DAMFC)/transglutaminase | Biosafe, excellent mechanical and biochemical properties, biocompatibility, and cell | - | Immunogenic | [ |
| Riboflavin, collagen, | - | Delayed enzyme-triggered degradation time | [ | ||
| Gelatin, graft-poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) | Low water/oil interfacial tensions, | [ | |||
| Alginate, borax | Reduced inflammatory | [ | |||
| Hyaluronic acid | Alginate/cellulose nanocrystals, adipic acid dihydrazide/fibrin/ | Bioprintable, biocompatible, good proliferation, stable, | - | Weak mechanical integrity, fast degradation in vivo | [ |
| Polydactyly chondrocytes, | Cartilage-like matrix | [ | |||
| Trans glutaminase | Excellent mitogen | [ | |||
| PEG, chondrocytes | Superior mechanical properties, improved metabolic viability | Fast degradation | [ | ||
| Fibrin | ECM microparticle, alginate | Stable, biocompatible, | - | [ | |
| Alginate | Gelatin, Hydroxyapatite, protein (BSA),Alginate, Fibrinogen | Tunable mechanical | Interconnected mesh structure, great flexibility and degradation | Slow and unpredictable degradation in vivo | [ |
| Hydroxyapatite (HAP) complex | - | [ | |||
| Bone marrow-derived | - | [ | |||
| - | Excellent viscoelasticity | [ | |||
| Gelatin | High degradation | [ | |||
| Elastin | Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide- | Biocompatible, proper | - | Difficult to integrate with surrounding tissue, | [ |
| Silk | Cell interactions | [ | |||
| Chondroitin | Pullulan/poly | Biocompatible, | Self-healing | Immunogenic | [ |
| No cytotoxicity | [ |
Figure 4Various methods of hydrogel production.
Summary of advanced hydrogel in cartilage tissue engineering.
| Advanced Hydrogel Type | Main Materials | Advantages | Disadvantages | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi materials | Chondrocyte-laden GelMA, PCL | Porous structure, cell proliferation, excellent mechanical and thermo-reversible | Long-time UV exposure and low cell viability | [ |
| PCL, Pluronic F-127 | Biocompatible, biodegradable, finite antigenicity | Immune response and therapeutic efficacy have not determined | [ | |
| Poly(vinyl alcohol), | Great differentiation, ability to produce complex structure and support components | Low shape fidelity | [ | |
| IPN | Polycaprolactone, Poly (acrylic acid), Cellulosic nano-whisker, Acrylic-urethane cross-linker | Improved the mechanical properties, water | Need to optimization | [ |
| Carboxymethyl dextran, Amino dextran | Excellent mechanical stable, adhesion, and spreading behavior of fibroblast cells, | Immune responses have not been determined | [ | |
| Hydroxyapatite particles, | Proper osteochondral healing, suitable | Using of poor supramolecular | [ | |
| Conjugated dextran with | Excellent resilience, good biocompatibility | N/A | [ | |
| Gelatin, Alginate polyacrylamide | Enhanced mechanical properties, excellent cell proliferation, finite cytotoxicity, chondrogenic gene expression, and structural stability, great | Uncontrollable porosity, Formation of a thin superficial layer that does not allow cell penetration | [ | |
| Ethylene diamine-functionalized HA, Divinyl sulfone-inulin | Biodegradable, FDA-approved, good mechanical properties | Low cell viability | [ | |
| Low-molecular-weight PVA, High molecular weight HA | Biocompatible, excellent swelling properties and cell viability | Fast gelation in room temperature | [ | |
| Poly(ethylene glycol), | Excellent solubility in GAG deposition during structure maturation, support | Low enzyme degradation | [ | |
| Methacrylated HA, Fibrin | Biocompatible, Support of differentiation | Unstable and unsuitable | [ | |
| Methacrylated chondroitin | Enhanced collagen biosynthesis and GAGs in the cell-matrix, low cost | Low cell viability | [ | |
| Supramolecular | Adamantane-functionalized HA, monoacrylated β-cyclodextrin | Great drying and re-swelling without changes in water content or shape, excellent collagen | N/A | [ |
| Cucurbituril, diaminohexane | Controlled dexamethasone release, enhanced cell proliferation, GAG synthesis, and chondrogenic gene expression, in vivo neocartilage production | N/A | [ | |
| Nanomaterials | Alginate, Poly(acrylamide) | Great viscoelasticity, biodegradable, | N/A | [ |
| Poly(vinyl alcohol), Graphene oxide | Great bio-mechanical and bio-friction properties, excellent shear-thinning, printability, | Unsuitable pore size | [ | |
| Nano hydroxyapatite, | Biocompatible, practicable, excellent mechanical properties, sensitive to compressive stress, | N/A | [ | |
| Poly(vinyl alcohol), | Proper mechanical properties, great mesenchymal stem cells growth | Variable crystallinity | [ | |
| Hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, Laponites | Excellent mechanical properties, oxygen | Some toxicity, decreased | [ | |
| PEG, Laponite particles | Good elastic modulus, biocompatible, excellent mechanical properties | Low cell viability | [ | |
| Silk fibers, | Excellent mechanical properties, GAG, | Unsuitable biological properties, toxic gelation agent | [ |
Figure 5Schematic classification of self-healing schemes.
Figure 6Main self-healing mechanisms and polymer behavior in hydrogels. (1). Damage occurrence, (2). Self-healing process, and (3). Healed hydrogel.
Figure 7(a) Schematic illustration of the micellar copolymerization of the UPyHCBA and acrylamide. The self-healing mechanism (i.e., hydrophobic interactions) of the micellar copolymerization hydrogels [183]. (b) Schematic illustration of the preparation process of silk fibroin-based hydrophobic-association hydrogels; optical images of the self-healing process of hydrogels over time; hydrogel region before and after healing. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [184].
Figure 8(a) Guest–host hydrogel formation based on the complexation of adamantane and β-cyclodextrin and corresponding synthesis processes. Schematic representation of hydrogel formation via guest–host interactions. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [193]. (b) Schematic illustration of a supramolecular hydrogel based on host–guest complexation with cucurit[8]uril (CB[8]). Reproduced with permission from Ref. [191]. (c) Left: Schematic illustration for injectable supramolecular hydrogels encapsulating MSCs for cartilage tissue regeneration. Right: optical images and histological analysis of regenerated cartilage tissues after treating with hydrogels and MSCs. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [105]. (d) The host-guest interactions between Azo derivatives and CD derivatives in the presence and absence of light and the schematic illustration of the alginate-based cyclodextrin/azo-polyacrylamide composite self-healing process. Reproduced with permission from Ref. [196].
Summary of intrinsic mechanisms of self-healing hydrogels in cartilage tissue engineering.
| Mechanism Type | Materials | Self- | Time of | Properties | Main Reactions | Healing | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dynamic | Poly(ethylene oxide) | Room | 48 h | Biocompatible, cell viability, good viscoelasticity, improved mechanical stability | Acylhydrazone exchange | N/A | [ |
| Chitosan, Dialdehyde | 25 °C | <30 min | Fast crosslinking time under | Crosslinking by Schiff-base | 100% | [ | |
| O-carboxymethyl chitosan | RT | - | Electrostatic attraction, porous and interconnected morphology, storage modulus, excellent pH sensitive swelling properties | Schiff base reaction between the amino groups on the chitosan and aldehyde groups of crosslink agent, host-guest reaction of poly(β-cyclodextrin) with diamantine | ≥97% | [ | |
| Dialdehyde—modified | Ambient temperature | 10 min | Fast crosslinking, improved mechanical properties, bioprintable, biocompatible | Schiff base reaction between the di-aldehyde groups on AHA and amino groups on Cys | ~100% | [ | |
| Aldehyde—functionalized surface-modified cellulose nanocrystals (a-CNCs) | RT | - | Biocompatible, injectable in situ, rapid shear thinning, cell viability, good viscoelasticity, improved mechanical stability | Schiff-base reaction between the aldehyde groups on a-CNCs and amine groups on collagen | ~100% | [ | |
| Lactose-modified chitosan (CTL), Boric acid, Mannitol | RT | 5 min | Biocompatible, excellent | Schiff base reactions between the bronic groups in boric acid and the amino groups in CTL | 100% | [ | |
| Triblock(ABA) | 25 °C | 24 h, | Biocompatible, excellent | The reversible ring-opening | N/A | [ | |
| Gelatin, Dialdehyde | 37 °C | 1 h | Excellent biocompatibility, | Schiff base reaction between amino-gelatin and dialdehyde | 90% | [ | |
| Oxidized alginate (OA), Semicarbazone | RT | 10 min | Biocompatibility, excellent stiffness, viscoelasticity, spreading of fibroblasts and cell adhesion, | The Divalent bond between amino bonds of OA and Ca+2
| 70% (40%) | [ | |
| Acrylamide-modified | Basic pH, 25 °C | 2 h | Good biocompatibility | Schiff base reactions between imine linkages amine groups of acrylamide-modified chitin and dialdehyde groups | N/A | [ | |
| Chondroitin sulfate | 20 °C, high moisture | 2 h | Excellent viability, good | Schiff base reactions between | N/A | [ | |
| Hydrogen | Urethane, Urea, | RT | 48 h | Excellent toughness, tensile strength, | Hierarchical hydrogen bonding of urethane and supramolecular interaction | 90% | [ |
| Ureido- pyrimidinone (UPy), Functionalized dextran | 20 °C | 10 min | Biocompatible, good | Ureido-pyrimidinone (UPy)- | 100% | [ | |
| 2-ureido-4[1H]-pyrimidinone (UPy), Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) | RT | N/A | Tunable mechanical | Hydrogen-bonding between UPy and PEG | N/A | [ | |
| Polyurethane (PU), Tannin, Acid- modified nano tungsten disulfide | RT | 12 h | Excellent mechanical strength and tensile | Noncovalent bonding connection of nano filer, interfacial hydrogen bonds between TA-WS2 and PU | 100% | [ | |
| Cucurbit[8]uril (CB[8]), Acrylamide, | RT | Very fast | Good mechanical properties | Hydrogen bond | N/A | [ | |
| Ionic | 2-hydroxypropyltrimethyl ammonium chloride chitosan (HACC), Poly(acrylic acid) (PAAc)-Fe3+ | 70 °C | 48 h | Excellent mechanical | Both macromolecular positively charged HACC and Fe3+ metal ions acted as cross-linkers to form ionic bonds with negatively charged PAAc | 74% | [ |
| Chitosan, Arginine (Arg), Tripolyphosphate (TPP) | RT | 48 h | Tunable structural | Reaction of Polyanions of TPP and cations of amino acid arginin | N/A | [ | |
| Ammonium persulfate (APS), N,N,N′,N′- | RT, pH ≤ 3 | N/A | Anti-fatigue, good mechanical properties, time-independent healing | Positively and negatively charged groups of APS and TEMED | 66–73% | [ | |
| Supramolecular Interaction | β-cyclodextrin modified | RT | 12 h | Injectable, good cell adhesion and differentiation, excellent mechanical properties | Guest–host interactions | 100% | [ |
| Adamantane functionalized hyaluronic acid, | RT | 12 h | Photo-cross-linkable | Guest–host interactions | N/A | [ | |
| β-cyclodextrin, adamantine bound by peptide tether to Hyaluronic acid | 37 °C | Fast | Injectable, good cell adhesion and differentiation, excellent mechanical stability | Guest–host interactions | 100% | [ | |
| β-cyclodextrin-, | 20 °C | 1 min–1 h | Injectable, excellent mechanical properties | Guest–host interactions | N/A | [ | |
| β Cholic-acid, | 20 °C | <1 min | Injectable, degradable | Guest–host interaction | 97% | [ | |
| Hydrophobic interaction | Acrylamide, Octyl phenol | RT | 6 days | Excellent mechanical | Micelles between the hydrophobic acrylates and sodium | 70% | [ |
| Cellulose nanowhiskers (CNW), Acrylamide (AM), Stearyl methacrylate, Sodium dodecylsulfat (SDS) | RT | 60 min | Excellent mechanical | Hydrophobic interaction of CNW and AM | 100% | [ |
Summary of the recent studies on self-healing hydrogels with multiple crosslinks for CTE applications.
| Hydrogels (Materials) | Bonding Mechanisms | Properties | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polyvinyl alcohol/poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)/sulfosuccinic acid | H-bonding | High water content (75 wt %) | [ |
| Crystallization | High tensile stress (~2.5 MPa) | ||
| Electrostatic interactions | Large elongation (>600%) | ||
| Conductivity (~25 mS/cm) | |||
| Carboxymethyl cellulose/borate/gelatin | Schiff-base reaction | pH and glucose responsive | [ |
| Boronate-diol complexation | |||
| P(urea-IL1-SPMA1)-3d | H-bonding | Tensile strength of ~1.3 MPa | [ |
| Ionic interaction | Strain at break of ~720% | ||
| Toughness of ~6.7 MJ/m3 | |||
| Laponite® nano-clay, hydroxyapatite, poly-L-arginine, | H-bonding | - | [ |
| Electrostatic interactions | |||
| Poly(diallyldimethylammonium chloride)/branched | H-bonding | Tensile strength: 1.26 MPa | [ |
| Electrostatic interactions | Strain at break: 2434.2% | ||
| Toughness: 19.53 MJ/m3 | |||
| Free radical polymerization of acrylic acid/acrylamide in the presence of chitosan | H-bonding | High water content (<90%) | [ |
| Electrostatic interactions | Strain at break <625%) | ||
| High self-healing efficiency (<88%) | |||
| Functionalized single-wall carbon nanotube/polyvinyl | H-bonding | Fast self-healing ability (~2 s) | [ |
| π-π interactions | High self-healing efficiency (99%) | ||
| Robust adhesiveness | |||
| Amoc (9-anthracenemethoxycarbonyl)-capped dipeptides | H-bonding | Antibacterial efficacy | [ |
| π-π interactions | |||
| Hyaluronic acid-graft-dopamine and reduced graphene oxide/using a H2O2/HPR (horseradish peroxidase) | H-bonding | Antioxidant activity | [ |
| Photothermal effect | |||
| π-π interactions | Adhesive hydrogel | ||
| Hemostatic hydrogel | |||
| Conductive hydrogel | |||
| Casein sodium salt from bovine milk/polydopamine/polyacrylamide | H-bonding | Super-stretchability | [ |
| π-π interactions | Excellent fatigue resistance | ||
| Rapid self-healing | |||
| Poly (styrene-acrylic acid) core-shell nanoparticles/free radical | H-bonding | Excellent self-healing | [ |
| Hydrophobic interactions | Good mechanical properties | ||
| Alginate aldehyde/poly (acrylamide) | Schiff-base reaction | Excellent self-healing and mechanical properties | [ |
| H-bonding | |||
| Glycol chitosan/cellulose nanofiber/telechelic difunctional polyethylene glycol | Schiff-base reaction | Injectability (neural stem cells delivery) | [ |
| H-bonding | |||
| Salicylaldehyde benzoyl hydrazone-terminal poly(ethylene glycol)/Ni2+ | Metal–ligand coordination | Rapid self-healing | [ |
| Hydrophobic interactions | |||
| Adamantane and β-cyclodextrin modified hyaluronic | Michael addition crosslinking (covalent reaction) | Injectability | [ |
| Rapid self-healing | |||
| Host-guest interactions | Cytocompatibility | ||
| Mechanical toughness |
Comparison among fabrication methods in tissue engineering.
| Method | Main Characteristic | Resulted Porosity | Cell | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freeze casting | Ceramic slurries are used in this method; then, water is evaporated. It produces pores due to formation of ice crystals. | <85% | <90% | [ |
| Freeze-drying | It is an easy procedure that can be applied with natural materials such | 30%–80% | <90% | [ |
| Solvent casting and Particle leaching | It uses casting molds to produce 3D scaffolds by polymer solution. Then, | 50%–90% | 75%–88% | [ |
| Gas foaming | Using high-pressure carbon dioxide for expanding the polymer matrix without applying high temperature or toxic solvents. Changing pressure can also create scaled porous scaffolds. | <90% | N/A | [ |
| Phase separation | Changing temperature for polymer and solvent separation results in a solid polymer due to phase separation. Finally, a desirable, homogenous, | 60%–98% | <98% | [ |
| Electrospinning | Nanoscale or microscale fibers are produced by tuning process parameters and chemicals in this method. | 80%–95% | <80% | [ |
| Sol–gel | Colloidal metal oxides are applied traditionally to create tunable porous | N/A | N/A | [ |
| Additive manufacturing | Extrusion methods in biomedical applications are often polymer-based and provide benefits in cost, size, and flexibility against old manufacturing | 80%–90% | 60%–95% | [ |
Figure 9Hydrogel properties in bioprinting. (a) The crosslinking mechanism is related to polymer types that impact cell viability and structure properties. (b) Hydration of a hydrogel system facilitates nutrients and wastes transport within a printed structure. (c) Cell adhesion that supports cell proliferation and migration can be controlled by changing the polymer type. (d) Degradation mechanisms can influence cellular migration. (e) The durability of 3D printed structures is essential to mimic native tissue biomechanical properties and to retain the shape of constructs during cellular growth. (f) Viscous solutions can suspend and protect cells from shear stress inside an extrusion nozzle and reduce flowability of hydrogels after printing (low viscosity solutions can avoid clogging; however, cell settling may occur).