Creation of Grooved Tissue Engineering Scaffolds from Architectured Multilayer Polymer Composites by a Tuneable One‐Step Degradation Process

Author:

Vellayappan Muthu Vignesh1,Duarte Francisco1,Sollogoub Cyrille2,Dirrenberger Justin2,Guinault Alain2,Frith Jessica E.134,Parkington Helena C.5,Molotnikov Andrey16,Cameron Neil R.1378ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Monash University 14 Alliance Lane Clayton VIC 3800 Australia

2. PIMM, Arts et Metiers Institute of Technology CNRS, Cnam HESAM University 151 boulevard de l'Hopital Paris 75013 France

3. Australian Research Council Training Centre for Cell and Tissue Engineering Technologies Monash University Clayton VIC 3800 Australia

4. Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute Monash University Clayton VIC 3800 Australia

5. Department of Physiology Biomedicine Discovery Institute Monash University 26, Innovation Walk Victoria 3800 Australia

6. RMIT Centre for Additive Manufacturing School of Engineering RMIT University Melbourne VIC 3000 Australia

7. School of Engineering University of Warwick Coventry CV4 7AL UK

8. Nanotechnology and Catalysis Research Centre (NANOCAT) Universiti Malaya Kuala Lumpur 50603 Malaysia

Abstract

AbstractThe surface properties of biomaterials interact directly with biological systems, influencing cellular responses, tissue integration, and biocompatibility. Surface topography plays a critical role in cardiac tissue engineering by affecting electrical conductivity, cardiomyocyte alignment, and contractile function. Current methods for controlling surface properties and topography in cardiac tissue engineering scaffolds are limited, expensive, and lack precision. This study introduces a low‐cost, one‐step degradation process to create scaffolds with well‐defined micro‐grooves from multilayered 3D printed poly(lactic acid)/thermoplastic polyurethane composites. The approach provides control over erosion rate and surface morphology, allowing easy tuning of scaffold topographical cues for tissue engineering applications. The findings reported in this study provide a library of easily tuneable scaffold topographical cues. A strong dependence of neonatal rat cardiomyocyte (NRCM) contact guidance with the multilayers' dimension and shape in partially degraded polylactic acid (PLA)/thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) samples is observed. NRCMs cultured on samples with a layer thickness of 13 ± 2 µm and depth of 4.7 ± 0.2 µm demonstrate the most regular contractions. Hence, the proposed fabrication scheme can be used to produce a new generation of biomaterials with excellent controllability determined by multilayer thickness, printing parameters, and degradation treatment duration.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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