Biodegradable Poly(ester) Urethane Acrylate Resins for Digital Light Processing: From Polymer Synthesis to 3D Printed Tissue Engineering Constructs

Author:

Wang Rong1,Damanik Febriyani1,Kuhnt Tobias1,Jaminon Armand2,Hafeez Shahzad1,Liu Hong3,Ippel Hans2,Dijkstra Pieter J.1,Bouvy Nicole3,Schurgers Leon2,ten Cate A. Tessa45,Dias Aylvin6,Moroni Lorenzo1,Baker Matthew B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Complex Tissue Regeneration MERLN Institute for Technology‐Inspired Regenerative Medicine Maastricht University Maastricht 6229 ER The Netherlands

2. School for Cardiovascular Diseases Faculty of Health Medicine and Life Sciences Maastricht University Maastricht 6229 ER The Netherlands

3. Department of Surgery Maastricht University Medical Center Maastricht 6229 HX The Netherlands

4. Department of Materials for Additive Manufacturing TNO P.O. Box 6235 Eindhoven 5600 HE The Netherlands

5. Department of Additive Manufacturing Brightlands Materials Center Urmonderbaan 22 Geleen 6167 RD The Netherlands

6. DSM Biomedical DSM Koestraat 1 Geleen 6167 RA The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractDigital light processing (DLP) is an accurate and fast additive manufacturing technique to produce a variety of products, from patient‐customized biomedical implants to consumer goods. However, DLP's use in tissue engineering has been hampered due to a lack of biodegradable resin development. Herein, a library of biodegradable poly(esters) capped with urethane acrylate (with variations in molecular weight) is investigated as the basis for DLP printable resins for tissue engineering. The synthesized oligomers show good printability and are capable of creating complex structures with mechanical moduli close to those of medium‐soft tissues (1–3 MPa). While fabricated films from different molecular weight resins show few differences in surface topology, wettability, and protein adsorption, the adhesion and metabolic activity of NCTC clone 929 (L929) cells and human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs) are significantly different. Resins from higher molecular weight oligomers provide greater cell adhesion and metabolic activity. Furthermore, these materials show compatibility in a subcutaneous in vivo pig model. These customizable, biodegradable, and biocompatible resins show the importance of molecular tuning and open up new possibilities for the creation of biocompatible constructs for tissue engineering.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials

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