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Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration

Urethral stenosis is a pathological condition that consists in the narrowing of the urethral lumen because of the formation of scar tissue. Unfortunately, none of the current surgical approaches represent an optimal solution because of the high stricture recurrence rate. In this context, we prelimin...

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Autores principales: Gallo, Nunzia, Natali, Maria Lucia, Curci, Claudia, Picerno, Angela, Gallone, Anna, Vulpi, Marco, Vitarelli, Antonio, Ditonno, Pasquale, Cascione, Mariafrancesca, Sallustio, Fabio, Rinaldi, Rosaria, Sannino, Alessandro, Salvatore, Luca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8707771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34947245
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14247648
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author Gallo, Nunzia
Natali, Maria Lucia
Curci, Claudia
Picerno, Angela
Gallone, Anna
Vulpi, Marco
Vitarelli, Antonio
Ditonno, Pasquale
Cascione, Mariafrancesca
Sallustio, Fabio
Rinaldi, Rosaria
Sannino, Alessandro
Salvatore, Luca
author_facet Gallo, Nunzia
Natali, Maria Lucia
Curci, Claudia
Picerno, Angela
Gallone, Anna
Vulpi, Marco
Vitarelli, Antonio
Ditonno, Pasquale
Cascione, Mariafrancesca
Sallustio, Fabio
Rinaldi, Rosaria
Sannino, Alessandro
Salvatore, Luca
author_sort Gallo, Nunzia
collection PubMed
description Urethral stenosis is a pathological condition that consists in the narrowing of the urethral lumen because of the formation of scar tissue. Unfortunately, none of the current surgical approaches represent an optimal solution because of the high stricture recurrence rate. In this context, we preliminarily explored the potential of an insoluble type-I collagen from horse tendon as scaffolding material for the development of innovative devices for the regeneration of injured urethral tracts. Non-porous collagen-based substrates were produced and optimized, in terms of crosslinking density of the macromolecular structure, to either provide mechanical properties compliant with the urinary tract physiological stress and better sustain tissue regeneration. The effect of the adopted crosslinking strategy on the protein integrity and on the substrate physical–chemical, mechanical and biological properties was investigated in comparison with a decellularized matrix from porcine small intestinal submucosa (SIS patch), an extensively used xenograft licensed for clinical use in urology. The optimized production protocols allowed the preservation of the type I collagen native structure and the realization of a substrate with appealing end-use properties. The biological response, preliminarily investigated by immunofluorescence experiments on human adult renal stem/progenitor cells until 28 days, showed the formation of a stem-cell monolayer within 14 days and the onset of spheroids within 28 days. These results suggested the great potential of the collagen-based material for the development of scaffolds for urethral plate regeneration and for in vitro cellular studies.
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spelling pubmed-87077712021-12-25 Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration Gallo, Nunzia Natali, Maria Lucia Curci, Claudia Picerno, Angela Gallone, Anna Vulpi, Marco Vitarelli, Antonio Ditonno, Pasquale Cascione, Mariafrancesca Sallustio, Fabio Rinaldi, Rosaria Sannino, Alessandro Salvatore, Luca Materials (Basel) Article Urethral stenosis is a pathological condition that consists in the narrowing of the urethral lumen because of the formation of scar tissue. Unfortunately, none of the current surgical approaches represent an optimal solution because of the high stricture recurrence rate. In this context, we preliminarily explored the potential of an insoluble type-I collagen from horse tendon as scaffolding material for the development of innovative devices for the regeneration of injured urethral tracts. Non-porous collagen-based substrates were produced and optimized, in terms of crosslinking density of the macromolecular structure, to either provide mechanical properties compliant with the urinary tract physiological stress and better sustain tissue regeneration. The effect of the adopted crosslinking strategy on the protein integrity and on the substrate physical–chemical, mechanical and biological properties was investigated in comparison with a decellularized matrix from porcine small intestinal submucosa (SIS patch), an extensively used xenograft licensed for clinical use in urology. The optimized production protocols allowed the preservation of the type I collagen native structure and the realization of a substrate with appealing end-use properties. The biological response, preliminarily investigated by immunofluorescence experiments on human adult renal stem/progenitor cells until 28 days, showed the formation of a stem-cell monolayer within 14 days and the onset of spheroids within 28 days. These results suggested the great potential of the collagen-based material for the development of scaffolds for urethral plate regeneration and for in vitro cellular studies. MDPI 2021-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8707771/ /pubmed/34947245 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14247648 Text en © 2021 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
Gallo, Nunzia
Natali, Maria Lucia
Curci, Claudia
Picerno, Angela
Gallone, Anna
Vulpi, Marco
Vitarelli, Antonio
Ditonno, Pasquale
Cascione, Mariafrancesca
Sallustio, Fabio
Rinaldi, Rosaria
Sannino, Alessandro
Salvatore, Luca
Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title_full Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title_fullStr Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title_short Analysis of the Physico-Chemical, Mechanical and Biological Properties of Crosslinked Type-I Collagen from Horse Tendon: Towards the Development of Ideal Scaffolding Material for Urethral Regeneration
title_sort analysis of the physico-chemical, mechanical and biological properties of crosslinked type-i collagen from horse tendon: towards the development of ideal scaffolding material for urethral regeneration
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8707771/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34947245
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14247648
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