Engineering Microgel Packing to Tailor the Physical and Biological Properties of Gelatin Methacryloyl Granular Hydrogel Scaffolds

Author:

Jaberi Arian1,Kedzierski Alexander2,Kheirabadi Sina1,Tagay Yerbol3,Ataie Zaman1,Zavari Saman1,Naghashnejad Mohammad1,Waldron Olivia4,Adhikari Daksh1,Lester Gerald1,Gallagher Colin1,Borhan Ali1,Ravnic Dino45,Tabdanov Erdem36,Sheikhi Amir1257ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical Engineering The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA

3. Department of Pharmacology Penn State College of Medicine The Pennsylvania State University Hershey PA 17033 USA

4. Division of Plastic Surgery Department of Surgery Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Hershey PA 17033 USA

5. Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA

6. Penn State Cancer Institute Penn State College of Medicine The Pennsylvania State University Hershey PA 17033 USA

7. Department of Neurosurgery College of Medicine The Pennsylvania State University Hershey PA 17033 USA

Abstract

AbstractGranular hydrogel scaffolds (GHS) are fabricated via placing hydrogel microparticles (HMP) in close contact (packing), followed by physical and/or chemical interparticle bond formation. Gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) GHS have recently emerged as a promising platform for biomedical applications; however, little is known about how the packing of building blocks, physically crosslinked soft GelMA HMP, affects the physical (pore microarchitecture and mechanical/rheological properties) and biological (in vitro and in vivo) attributes of GHS. Here, the GHS pore microarchitecture is engineered via the external (centrifugal) force‐induced packing and deformation of GelMA HMP to regulate GHS mechanical and rheological properties, as well as biological responses in vitro and in vivo. Increasing the magnitude and duration of centrifugal force increases the HMP deformation/packing, decreases GHS void fraction and median pore diameter, and increases GHS compressive and storage moduli. MDA‐MB‐231 human triple negative breast adenocarcinoma cells spread and flatten on the GelMA HMP surface in loosely packed GHS, whereas they adopt an elongated morphology in highly packed GHS as a result of spatial confinement. Via culturing untreated or blebbistatin‐treated cells in GHS, the effect of non‐muscle myosin II‐driven contractility on cell morphology is shown. In vivo subcutaneous implantation in mice confirms a significantly higher endothelial, fibroblast, and macrophage cell infiltration within the GHS with a lower packing density, which is in accordance with the in vitro cell migration outcome. These results indicate that the packing state of GelMA GHS may enable the engineering of cell response in vitro and tissue response in vivo. This research is a fundamental step forward in standardizing and engineering GelMA GHS microarchitecture for tissue engineering and regeneration.

Publisher

Wiley

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