4.8 Article

Injectable chitosan hyaluronic acid hydrogels for cartilage tissue engineering

Journal

ACTA BIOMATERIALIA
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 4779-4786

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actbio.2012.08.033

Keywords

Chitosan; Hyaluronic acid; Photopolymerization; Hydrogel; Tissue engineering

Funding

  1. UC Discovery grant [Bio 07-10677]
  2. UCLA Academic Senate Research Award
  3. UCLA School of Dentistry Faculty seed grant

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Injectable cartilaginous constructs that can form gels in tissue defects have many advantages in tissue engineering applications. In this study we created an injectable hydrogel consisting of methacrylated glycol chitosan (MeGC) and hyaluronic acid (HA) by photocrosslinking with a riboflavin photoinitiator under visible light. A minimum irradiation time of 40 s was required to produce stable gels for cell encapsulation with 87-90% encapsulated chondrocyte viability. Although increasing the irradiation time from 40 to 600 s significantly enhanced the compressive modulus of the hydrogels up to 11 or 17 kPa for MeGC or MeGC/HA, respectively, these conditions reduced the encapsulated cell viability to 60-65%. The majority of chondrocytes encapsulated in MeGC hydrogels after 300 s irradiation maintained a rounded shape with a high cell viability of similar to 80-87% over a 21 day culture period. The incorporation of HA in MeGC hydrogels increased the proliferation and deposition of cartilaginous extracellular matrix by encapsulated chondrocytes. These findings demonstrate that MeGC/HA composite hydrogels have the potential for cartilage repair. (c) 2012 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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