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Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting

Autologous fat grafting is hampered by unpredictable outcomes due to high tissue resorption. Hydrogels based on enzymatically pretreated tunicate nanocellulose (ETC) and alginate (ALG) are biocompatible, safe, and present physiochemical properties capable of promoting cell survival. Here, we compare...

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Autores principales: Oskarsdotter, Kristin, Nordgård, Catherine T., Apelgren, Peter, Säljö, Karin, Solbu, Anita A., Eliasson, Edwin, Sämfors, Sanna, Sætrang, Henriette E. M., Asdahl, Lise Cathrine, Thompson, Eric M., Troedsson, Christofer, Simonsson, Stina, Strand, Berit L., Gatenholm, Paul, Kölby, Lars
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37888386
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels9100813
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author Oskarsdotter, Kristin
Nordgård, Catherine T.
Apelgren, Peter
Säljö, Karin
Solbu, Anita A.
Eliasson, Edwin
Sämfors, Sanna
Sætrang, Henriette E. M.
Asdahl, Lise Cathrine
Thompson, Eric M.
Troedsson, Christofer
Simonsson, Stina
Strand, Berit L.
Gatenholm, Paul
Kölby, Lars
author_facet Oskarsdotter, Kristin
Nordgård, Catherine T.
Apelgren, Peter
Säljö, Karin
Solbu, Anita A.
Eliasson, Edwin
Sämfors, Sanna
Sætrang, Henriette E. M.
Asdahl, Lise Cathrine
Thompson, Eric M.
Troedsson, Christofer
Simonsson, Stina
Strand, Berit L.
Gatenholm, Paul
Kölby, Lars
author_sort Oskarsdotter, Kristin
collection PubMed
description Autologous fat grafting is hampered by unpredictable outcomes due to high tissue resorption. Hydrogels based on enzymatically pretreated tunicate nanocellulose (ETC) and alginate (ALG) are biocompatible, safe, and present physiochemical properties capable of promoting cell survival. Here, we compared in situ and ex situ crosslinking of ETC/ALG hydrogels combined with lipoaspirate human adipose tissue (LAT) to generate an injectable formulation capable of retaining dimensional stability in vivo. We performed in situ crosslinking using two different approaches; inducing Ca(2+) release from CaCO(3) microparticles (CMPs) and physiologically available Ca(2+) in vivo. Additionally, we generated ex situ-crosslinked, 3D-bioprinted hydrogel-fat grafts. We found that in vitro optimization generated a CMP-crosslinking system with comparable stiffness to ex situ-crosslinked gels. Comparison of outcomes following in vivo injection of each respective crosslinked hydrogel revealed that after 30 days, in situ crosslinking generated fat grafts with less shape retention than 3D-bioprinted constructs that had undergone ex situ crosslinking. However, CMP addition improved fat-cell distribution and cell survival relative to grafts dependent on physiological Ca(2+) alone. These findings suggested that in situ crosslinking using CMP might promote the dimensional stability of injectable fat-hydrogel grafts, although 3D bioprinting with ex situ crosslinking more effectively ensured proper shape stability in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-106068832023-10-28 Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting Oskarsdotter, Kristin Nordgård, Catherine T. Apelgren, Peter Säljö, Karin Solbu, Anita A. Eliasson, Edwin Sämfors, Sanna Sætrang, Henriette E. M. Asdahl, Lise Cathrine Thompson, Eric M. Troedsson, Christofer Simonsson, Stina Strand, Berit L. Gatenholm, Paul Kölby, Lars Gels Article Autologous fat grafting is hampered by unpredictable outcomes due to high tissue resorption. Hydrogels based on enzymatically pretreated tunicate nanocellulose (ETC) and alginate (ALG) are biocompatible, safe, and present physiochemical properties capable of promoting cell survival. Here, we compared in situ and ex situ crosslinking of ETC/ALG hydrogels combined with lipoaspirate human adipose tissue (LAT) to generate an injectable formulation capable of retaining dimensional stability in vivo. We performed in situ crosslinking using two different approaches; inducing Ca(2+) release from CaCO(3) microparticles (CMPs) and physiologically available Ca(2+) in vivo. Additionally, we generated ex situ-crosslinked, 3D-bioprinted hydrogel-fat grafts. We found that in vitro optimization generated a CMP-crosslinking system with comparable stiffness to ex situ-crosslinked gels. Comparison of outcomes following in vivo injection of each respective crosslinked hydrogel revealed that after 30 days, in situ crosslinking generated fat grafts with less shape retention than 3D-bioprinted constructs that had undergone ex situ crosslinking. However, CMP addition improved fat-cell distribution and cell survival relative to grafts dependent on physiological Ca(2+) alone. These findings suggested that in situ crosslinking using CMP might promote the dimensional stability of injectable fat-hydrogel grafts, although 3D bioprinting with ex situ crosslinking more effectively ensured proper shape stability in vivo. MDPI 2023-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10606883/ /pubmed/37888386 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels9100813 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Oskarsdotter, Kristin
Nordgård, Catherine T.
Apelgren, Peter
Säljö, Karin
Solbu, Anita A.
Eliasson, Edwin
Sämfors, Sanna
Sætrang, Henriette E. M.
Asdahl, Lise Cathrine
Thompson, Eric M.
Troedsson, Christofer
Simonsson, Stina
Strand, Berit L.
Gatenholm, Paul
Kölby, Lars
Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title_full Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title_fullStr Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title_full_unstemmed Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title_short Injectable In Situ Crosslinking Hydrogel for Autologous Fat Grafting
title_sort injectable in situ crosslinking hydrogel for autologous fat grafting
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10606883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37888386
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels9100813
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