Ouro PMS, Costa DCS, Amaral AJR, Mano JF. A Supramolecular Injectable Methacryloyl Chitosan-Tricine-Based Hydrogel with 3D Printing Potential for Tissue Engineering Applications.
Macromol Biosci 2024;
24:e2300058. [PMID:
37154384 DOI:
10.1002/mabi.202300058]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/15/2023] [Revised: 05/04/2023] [Indexed: 05/10/2023]
Abstract
Printable hydrogels have attracted significant attention as versatile, tunable, and spatiotemporally controlled biomaterials for tissue engineering (TE) applications. Several chitosan-based systems are reported presenting low or no solubility in aqueous solutions at physiological pH. Herein, a novel neutrally charged, biomimetic, injectable, and cytocompatible dual-crosslinked (DC) hydrogel system based on a double functionalized chitosan (CHT) with methacryloyl and tricine moieties (CHTMA-Tricine), completely processable at physiological pH, with promising three-dimensional (3D) printing potential is presented. Tricine, an amino acid typically used in biomedicine, is capable of establishing supramolecular interactions (H-bonds) and is never explored as a hydrogel component for TE. CHTMA-Tricine hydrogels demonstrate significantly greater toughness (ranging from 656.5 ± 82.2 to 1067.5 ± 121.5 kJ m-3 ) compared to CHTMA hydrogels (ranging from 382.4 ± 44.1 to 680.8 ± 104.5 kJ m-3 ), highlighting the contribution of the supramolecular interactions for the overall reinforced 3D structure provided by tricine moieties. Cytocompatibility studies reveal that MC3T3-E1 pre-osteoblasts cells remain viable for 6 days when encapsulated in CHTMA-Tricine constructs, with semi-quantitative analysis showing ≈80% cell viability. This system's interesting viscoelastic properties allow the fabrication of multiple structures, which couple with a straightforward approach, will open doors for the design of advanced chitosan-based biomaterials through 3D bioprinting for TE.
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