Nanocomposite Gel as Injectable Therapeutic Scaffold: Microstructural Aspects and Bioactive Properties.
Olena IvashchenkoBarbara PeplińskaŁucja PrzysieckaL Emerson CoyMarcin JarekKatarzyna ChybczyńskaStefan JurgaPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
The development of tissue scaffolds able to provide proper and accelerated regeneration of tissue is a main task of tissue engineering. We developed a nanocomposite gel that may be used as an injectable therapeutic scaffold. The nanocomposite gel is based on biocompatible gelling agents with embedded nanoparticles (iron oxide, silver, and hydroxyapatite) providing therapeutic properties. We have investigated the microstructure of the nanocomposite gel exposed to different substrates (porous materials and biological tissue). Here we show that the nanocomposite gel has the ability to self-reassemble mimicking the substrate morphology: exposition on porous mineral substrate caused reassembling of nanocomposite gel into 10× smaller scale structure; exposition to a section of humerus cortical bone decreased the microstructure scale more than twice (to ≤3 μm). The reassembling happens through a transitional layer which exists near the phase separation boundary. Our results impact the knowledge of gels explaining their abundance in biological organisms from the microstructural point of view. The results of our biological experiments showed that the nanocomposite gel may find diverse applications in the biomedical field.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- reduced graphene oxide
- quantum dots
- hyaluronic acid
- white matter
- wound healing
- carbon nanotubes
- solid phase extraction
- gold nanoparticles
- visible light
- highly efficient
- stem cells
- healthcare
- multiple sclerosis
- aqueous solution
- amino acid
- bone mineral density
- iron oxide
- body composition
- postmenopausal women
- gram negative
- multidrug resistant
- atomic force microscopy
- bone loss