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Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering

Demineralized bone matrix (DBM) has been widely used clinically for dental, craniofacial and skeletal bone repair, as an osteoinductive and osteoconductive material. 3D printing (3DP) enables the creation of bone tissue engineering scaffolds with complex geometries and porosity. Photoreactive methac...

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Autores principales: Hogan, Katie J, Öztatlı, Hayriye, Perez, Marissa R, Si, Sophia, Umurhan, Reyhan, Jui, Elysa, Wang, Ziwen, Jiang, Emily Y, Han, Sa R, Diba, Mani, Jane Grande-Allen, K, Garipcan, Bora, Mikos, Antonios G
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37954896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbad090
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author Hogan, Katie J
Öztatlı, Hayriye
Perez, Marissa R
Si, Sophia
Umurhan, Reyhan
Jui, Elysa
Wang, Ziwen
Jiang, Emily Y
Han, Sa R
Diba, Mani
Jane Grande-Allen, K
Garipcan, Bora
Mikos, Antonios G
author_facet Hogan, Katie J
Öztatlı, Hayriye
Perez, Marissa R
Si, Sophia
Umurhan, Reyhan
Jui, Elysa
Wang, Ziwen
Jiang, Emily Y
Han, Sa R
Diba, Mani
Jane Grande-Allen, K
Garipcan, Bora
Mikos, Antonios G
author_sort Hogan, Katie J
collection PubMed
description Demineralized bone matrix (DBM) has been widely used clinically for dental, craniofacial and skeletal bone repair, as an osteoinductive and osteoconductive material. 3D printing (3DP) enables the creation of bone tissue engineering scaffolds with complex geometries and porosity. Photoreactive methacryloylated gelatin nanoparticles (GNP-MAs) 3DP inks have been developed, which display gel-like behavior for high print fidelity and are capable of post-printing photocrosslinking for control of scaffold swelling and degradation. Here, novel DBM nanoparticles (DBM-NPs, ∼400 nm) were fabricated and characterized prior to incorporation in 3DP inks. The objectives of this study were to determine how these DBM-NPs would influence the printability of composite colloidal 3DP inks, assess the impact of ultraviolet (UV) crosslinking on 3DP scaffold swelling and degradation and evaluate the osteogenic potential of DBM-NP-containing composite colloidal scaffolds. The addition of methacryloylated DBM-NPs (DBM-NP-MAs) to composite colloidal inks (100:0, 95:5 and 75:25 GNP-MA:DBM-NP-MA) did not significantly impact the rheological properties associated with printability, such as viscosity and shear recovery or photocrosslinking. UV crosslinking with a UV dosage of 3 J/cm(2) directly impacted the rate of 3DP scaffold swelling for all GNP-MA:DBM-NP-MA ratios with an ∼40% greater increase in scaffold area and pore area in uncrosslinked versus photocrosslinked scaffolds over 21 days in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Likewise, degradation (hydrolytic and enzymatic) over 21 days for all DBM-NP-MA content groups was significantly decreased, ∼45% less in PBS and collagenase-containing PBS, in UV-crosslinked versus uncrosslinked groups. The incorporation of DBM-NP-MAs into scaffolds decreased mass loss compared to GNP-MA-only scaffolds during collagenase degradation. An in vitro osteogenic study with bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells demonstrated osteoconductive properties of 3DP scaffolds for the DBM-NP-MA contents examined. The creation of photoreactive DBM-NP-MAs and their application in 3DP provide a platform for the development of ECM-derived colloidal materials and tailored control of biochemical cue presentation with broad tissue engineering applications.
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spelling pubmed-106345252023-11-10 Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering Hogan, Katie J Öztatlı, Hayriye Perez, Marissa R Si, Sophia Umurhan, Reyhan Jui, Elysa Wang, Ziwen Jiang, Emily Y Han, Sa R Diba, Mani Jane Grande-Allen, K Garipcan, Bora Mikos, Antonios G Regen Biomater Research Article Demineralized bone matrix (DBM) has been widely used clinically for dental, craniofacial and skeletal bone repair, as an osteoinductive and osteoconductive material. 3D printing (3DP) enables the creation of bone tissue engineering scaffolds with complex geometries and porosity. Photoreactive methacryloylated gelatin nanoparticles (GNP-MAs) 3DP inks have been developed, which display gel-like behavior for high print fidelity and are capable of post-printing photocrosslinking for control of scaffold swelling and degradation. Here, novel DBM nanoparticles (DBM-NPs, ∼400 nm) were fabricated and characterized prior to incorporation in 3DP inks. The objectives of this study were to determine how these DBM-NPs would influence the printability of composite colloidal 3DP inks, assess the impact of ultraviolet (UV) crosslinking on 3DP scaffold swelling and degradation and evaluate the osteogenic potential of DBM-NP-containing composite colloidal scaffolds. The addition of methacryloylated DBM-NPs (DBM-NP-MAs) to composite colloidal inks (100:0, 95:5 and 75:25 GNP-MA:DBM-NP-MA) did not significantly impact the rheological properties associated with printability, such as viscosity and shear recovery or photocrosslinking. UV crosslinking with a UV dosage of 3 J/cm(2) directly impacted the rate of 3DP scaffold swelling for all GNP-MA:DBM-NP-MA ratios with an ∼40% greater increase in scaffold area and pore area in uncrosslinked versus photocrosslinked scaffolds over 21 days in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Likewise, degradation (hydrolytic and enzymatic) over 21 days for all DBM-NP-MA content groups was significantly decreased, ∼45% less in PBS and collagenase-containing PBS, in UV-crosslinked versus uncrosslinked groups. The incorporation of DBM-NP-MAs into scaffolds decreased mass loss compared to GNP-MA-only scaffolds during collagenase degradation. An in vitro osteogenic study with bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells demonstrated osteoconductive properties of 3DP scaffolds for the DBM-NP-MA contents examined. The creation of photoreactive DBM-NP-MAs and their application in 3DP provide a platform for the development of ECM-derived colloidal materials and tailored control of biochemical cue presentation with broad tissue engineering applications. Oxford University Press 2023-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10634525/ /pubmed/37954896 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbad090 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hogan, Katie J
Öztatlı, Hayriye
Perez, Marissa R
Si, Sophia
Umurhan, Reyhan
Jui, Elysa
Wang, Ziwen
Jiang, Emily Y
Han, Sa R
Diba, Mani
Jane Grande-Allen, K
Garipcan, Bora
Mikos, Antonios G
Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title_full Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title_fullStr Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title_full_unstemmed Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title_short Development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3D printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
title_sort development of photoreactive demineralized bone matrix 3d printing colloidal inks for bone tissue engineering
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10634525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37954896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rb/rbad090
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