4.6 Article

Preparation and characterization of a biodegradable polyurethane hydrogel and the hybrid gel with soy protein for 3D cell-laden bioprinting

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 4, Issue 41, Pages 6694-6705

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6tb01501h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Program for Additive Manufacturing, Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST104-2218-E-002-010]
  2. University Cutting-Edge Steering Research Project, Ministry of Education [NTU-CESRP-103R104943]
  3. National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, ROC [CS-105-SP-02]

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3D printing shows great potential for fabricating customized scaffolds for tissue regeneration. Using hydrogel as a bioink for cell printing provides a biological platform for basic research and potential medical treatments. In this study, a waterborne poly(e-caprolactone) (PCL)-based biodegradable polyurethane (PU) with a soft segment replaced with 20 mol% of poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) diol or poly (D, L-lactide) (PDLLA) diol was prepared. These two PUs formed compact packing structures at temperatures >= 37 degrees C. They responded differently to temperature changes and the presence of electrolytes because of the difference in the free volume. With their thermal-responsive properties, both PU dispersions could form a gel in 3 min with the gel modulus reaching about 6-8 kPa after 30 min. To enhance the structural integrity during layer-by-layer deposition, the hybrid hydrogel of PU and soy protein isolate (PU/SPI hybrid) was further developed. The PU/SPI hybrid dispersion could undergo rapid gelation at 37 degrees C with the modulus reaching 130 Pa in 1 min. Moreover, the PU/SPI hybrid gel was readily blended with cells and printed at 37 degrees C without preheating. Neural stem cells (NSCs) were embedded in the hydrogels and analyzed for cell viability, metabolism, proliferation, and gene expression of neural-related markers. Cells cultured in the PU/SPI hybrid construct had better survival and proliferation than those in the PU gel. The PU/SPI hybrid ink may provide unique rheological properties for direct cell/tissue printing at 37 degrees C and a biomimetic microenvironment for cell survival, growth, and differentiation.

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