4.5 Review

Collagen-Based Electrospun Materials for Tissue Engineering: A Systematic Review

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering8030039

Keywords

collagen; electrospinning; tissue engineering

Funding

  1. Shriners Hospitals for Children [71012, 85102, 85700]

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This systematic review examines the use of electrospun collagen in tissue engineering applications, finding that different crosslinking methods can affect degradation resistance and strength of the scaffolds, which are capable of forming engineered tissues with high similarity to native structures.
Collagen is a key component of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in organs and tissues throughout the body and is used for many tissue engineering applications. Electrospinning of collagen can produce scaffolds in a wide variety of shapes, fiber diameters and porosities to match that of the native ECM. This systematic review aims to pool data from available manuscripts on electrospun collagen and tissue engineering to provide insight into the connection between source material, solvent, crosslinking method and functional outcomes. D-banding was most often observed in electrospun collagen formed using collagen type I isolated from calfskin, often isolated within the laboratory, with short solution solubilization times. All physical and chemical methods of crosslinking utilized imparted resistance to degradation and increased strength. Cytotoxicity was observed at high concentrations of crosslinking agents and when abbreviated rinsing protocols were utilized. Collagen and collagen-based scaffolds were capable of forming engineered tissues in vitro and in vivo with high similarity to the native structures.

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