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Influence of surface topography on PCL electrospun scaffolds for liver tissue engineering
- Source :
- Journal of Materials Chemistry. B
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Severe liver disease is one of the most common causes of death globally. Currently, whole organ transplantation is the only therapeutic method for end-stage liver disease treatment, however, the need for donor organs far outweighs demand. Recently liver tissue engineering is starting to show promise for alleviating part of this problem. Electrospinning is a well-known method to fabricate a nanofibre scaffold which mimics the natural extracellular matrix that can support cell growth. This study aims to investigate liver cell responses to topographical features on electrospun fibres. Scaffolds with large surface depression (2 μm) (LSD), small surface depression (0.37 μm) (SSD), and no surface depression (NSD) were fabricated by using a solvent–nonsolvent system. A liver cell line (HepG2) was seeded onto the scaffolds for up to 14 days. The SSD group exhibited higher levels of cell viability and DNA content compared to the other groups. Additionally, the scaffolds promoted gene expression of albumin, with all cases having similar levels, while the cell growth rate was altered. Furthermore, the scaffold with depressions showed 0.8 MPa higher ultimate tensile strength compared to the other groups. These results suggest that small depressions might be preferred by HepG2 cells over smooth and large depression fibres and highlight the potential for tailoring liver cell responses.<br />Electrospun polymer scaffolds with different surface topographies were made in this study, our results showed that these depression fibres can alter the performance of hepatocytes (HepG2).
- Subjects :
- Scaffold
Cell Survival
Surface Properties
Polyesters
Biomedical Engineering
Biocompatible Materials
Serum Albumin, Human
Extracellular matrix
Liver disease
Tensile Strength
medicine
Humans
General Materials Science
Viability assay
Tissue Engineering
Tissue Scaffolds
Chemistry
Cell growth
Liver cell
Albumin
General Chemistry
General Medicine
Hep G2 Cells
medicine.disease
Electrospinning
Collagen Type I, alpha 1 Chain
Gene Expression Regulation
Liver
Porosity
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 20507518 and 2050750X
- Volume :
- 9
- Issue :
- 38
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Materials Chemistry. B
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4bf291844eb6f5a1ae392e07006b43de