Extemporaneous Preparation of Injectable and Enzymatically Degradable 3D Cell Culture Matrices from an Animal-Component-Free Recombinant Protein Based on Human Collagen Type I.
Hiroyuki KamataSatoko Ashikari-HadaYusuke MoriAkihiko AzumaKen-Ichiro HataPublished in: Macromolecular rapid communications (2019)
Injectable hydrogels are considered important to realize safe and effective minimally invasive therapy. Although animal-derived natural polymers are well studied, they typically lack injectability and fail to eliminate the potential risks of immunogenic reactions or unknown pathogen contamination. Despite extensive research activities to explore ideal injectable hydrogels, such state-of-the-art technology remains inaccessible to non-specialists. In this article, the design of a new injectable hydrogel platform that can be extemporaneously prepared from commercially available animal-component-free materials is described. The hydrogels can be prepared simply by mixing mutually reactive aqueous solutions without necessitating specialized knowledge or equipment. Their solidification time can be adjusted by choosing proper buffer conditions from immediate to an extended period of time, that is, few or several tens of minutes depending on the concentration of polymeric components, which not only provides injectability, but enables 3D encapsulation of cells. Mesenchymal stromal/stem cells can be encapsulated and cultured in the hydrogels at least for 2 weeks by traditional cell culture techniques, and retrieved by collagenase digestion with cell viability of approximately 80%. This hydrogel platform accelerates future cell-related research activities.
Keyphrases
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- stem cells
- drug delivery
- endothelial cells
- minimally invasive
- human health
- bone marrow
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- wound healing
- risk assessment
- palliative care
- cell cycle arrest
- single cell
- drug release
- mesenchymal stem cells
- current status
- signaling pathway
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- cell death
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- amino acid
- cell proliferation
- drug induced
- cell free
- preterm birth
- health risk