4.8 Article

Electrospun Fiber Mesh for High-Resolution Measurements of Oxygen Tension in Cranial Bone Defect Repair

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 11, Issue 37, Pages 33548-33558

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b08341

Keywords

bone repair; coaxial electrospinning; oxygen tension; phosphorescence quenching; two photon laser scanning microscopy; two-photon phosphorescence lifetime microscopy

Funding

  1. [NIH R01AR067859]
  2. [R01DE019902]
  3. [R21DE02656]
  4. [NIH R21CA208921]
  5. [DoD BCRP W81XWH-17-1-0011]
  6. [NIH R01EB018464]
  7. [R24NS092986]
  8. [R21EB027397]

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Tissue oxygenation is one of the key determining factors in bone repair and bone tissue engineering. Adequate tissue oxygenation is essential for survival and differentiation of the bone-forming cells and ultimately the success of bone tissue regeneration. Two-photon phosphorescence lifetime microscopy (2PLM) has been successfully applied in the past to image oxygen distributions in tissue with high spatial resolution. However, delivery of phosphorescent probes into avascular compartments, such as those formed during early bone defect healing, poses significant problems. Here, we report a multifunctional oxygen-reporting fibrous matrix fabricated through encapsulation of a hydrophilic oxygen-sensitive, two-photon excitable phosphorescent probe, PtP-C343, in the core of fibers during coaxial electrospinning. The oxygen-sensitive fibers support bone marrow stromal cell growth and differentiation and at the same time enable real-time high-resolution probing of partial pressures of oxygen via 2PLM. The hydrophilicity of the probe facilitates its gradual release into the nearby microenvironment, allowing fibers to act as a vehicle for probe delivery into the healing tissue. In conjunction with a cranial defect window chamber model, which permits simultaneous imaging of the bone and neovasculature in vivo via two-photon laser scanning microscopy, the oxygen-reporting fibers provide a useful tool for minimally invasive, high-resolution, real-time 3D mapping of tissue oxygenation during bone defect healing, facilitating studies aimed at understanding the healing process and advancing design of tissue-engineered constructs for enhanced bone repair and regeneration.

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