4.8 Article

Low-Temperature Barrier Discharge Plasma Modification of Scaffolds Based on Polylactic Acid

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c11027

Keywords

polylactic acid; low-temperature plasma; barrier discharge; chemical compound; wettability; free surface energy; cell viability; macrophage activation; cytotoxicity

Funding

  1. Tomsk State University Development Program (Priority-2030)
  2. RFBR [20-32-90175]
  3. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation

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In this study, the effect of low-temperature barrier discharge plasma treatment on the modification of polylactic acid (PLA)-based scaffolds was explored. The immune response of macrophages to the modified PLA surface was also investigated. Results showed that argon plasma treatment can improve the wettability characteristics of PLA and increase the surface energy, but it has a certain effect on cell viability. Furthermore, the presence of PLA scaffolds does not cause excessive expression of proinflammatory cytokines.
We have explored the effect of low-temperature barrier discharge plasma treatment in oxygen, nitrogen, and argon on modification of the physicochemical properties of polylactic acid (PLA)-based scaffolds. The cellular-mediated immune response to the interaction of macrophages of three donors with the modified surface of PLA-based scaffolds was also investigated. Carbonization of the PLA surface accompanied by a carbon atomic concentration increase is shown to occur following plasma treatment. Argon plasma significantly affects the wettability characteristics of PLA; the hydrophilicity and lipophilicity are improved, and the surface energy is increased. The viability of cells in the presence of plasma-modified PLA scaffolds is lower than that for unmodified PLA but remains greater than that for the negative control. We find that PLA scaffolds do not cause increased expression of the proinflammatory (TNF alpha, IL-6, IL-1 beta) cytokines after 6 days of cell cultivation. At the same time, PLA scaffolds do not affect the increased production of anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10).

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