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Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering

Recently, the development of new materials with the desired characteristics for functional tissue engineering, ensuring tissue architecture and supporting cellular growth, has gained significant attention. Hydrogels, which possess similar properties to natural cellular matrixes, being able to repair...

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Autores principales: Filip, Daniela, Macocinschi, Doina, Zaltariov, Mirela-Fernanda, Ciubotaru, Bianca-Iulia, Bargan, Alexandra, Varganici, Cristian-Dragos, Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia, Peptanariu, Dragos, Balan-Porcarasu, Mihaela, Timofte-Zorila, Mihaela-Madalina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9407387/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36005120
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels8080519
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author Filip, Daniela
Macocinschi, Doina
Zaltariov, Mirela-Fernanda
Ciubotaru, Bianca-Iulia
Bargan, Alexandra
Varganici, Cristian-Dragos
Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia
Peptanariu, Dragos
Balan-Porcarasu, Mihaela
Timofte-Zorila, Mihaela-Madalina
author_facet Filip, Daniela
Macocinschi, Doina
Zaltariov, Mirela-Fernanda
Ciubotaru, Bianca-Iulia
Bargan, Alexandra
Varganici, Cristian-Dragos
Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia
Peptanariu, Dragos
Balan-Porcarasu, Mihaela
Timofte-Zorila, Mihaela-Madalina
author_sort Filip, Daniela
collection PubMed
description Recently, the development of new materials with the desired characteristics for functional tissue engineering, ensuring tissue architecture and supporting cellular growth, has gained significant attention. Hydrogels, which possess similar properties to natural cellular matrixes, being able to repair or replace biological tissues and support the healing process through cellular proliferation and viability, are a challenge when designing tissue scaffolds. This paper provides new insights into hydrogel-based polymeric blends (hydroxypropyl cellulose/Pluronic F68), aiming to evaluate the contributions of both components in the development of new tissue scaffolds. In order to study the interactions within the hydrogel blends, FTIR and (1)HNMR spectroscopies were used. The porosity and the behavior in moisture medium were highlighted by SEM and DVS analyses. The biodegradability of the hydrogel blends was studied in a simulated biological medium. The hydrogel composition was determinant for the scaffold behavior: the HPC component was found to have a great influence on the BET and GAB areas, on the monolayer values estimated from sorption–desorption isotherms and on mucoadhesivity on small intestine mucosa, while the Pluronic F68 component improved the thermal stability. All blends were also found to have good mechanical strength and increased biocompatibility on the NHDF cell line. Based on their particular compositions and increased mucoadhesivity on small intestine mucosa, these polymeric blends could be effective in the repair or recovery of damaged cell membranes (due to the contribution of Pluronic F68) or in control drug-delivery intestinal formulations.
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spelling pubmed-94073872022-08-26 Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering Filip, Daniela Macocinschi, Doina Zaltariov, Mirela-Fernanda Ciubotaru, Bianca-Iulia Bargan, Alexandra Varganici, Cristian-Dragos Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia Peptanariu, Dragos Balan-Porcarasu, Mihaela Timofte-Zorila, Mihaela-Madalina Gels Article Recently, the development of new materials with the desired characteristics for functional tissue engineering, ensuring tissue architecture and supporting cellular growth, has gained significant attention. Hydrogels, which possess similar properties to natural cellular matrixes, being able to repair or replace biological tissues and support the healing process through cellular proliferation and viability, are a challenge when designing tissue scaffolds. This paper provides new insights into hydrogel-based polymeric blends (hydroxypropyl cellulose/Pluronic F68), aiming to evaluate the contributions of both components in the development of new tissue scaffolds. In order to study the interactions within the hydrogel blends, FTIR and (1)HNMR spectroscopies were used. The porosity and the behavior in moisture medium were highlighted by SEM and DVS analyses. The biodegradability of the hydrogel blends was studied in a simulated biological medium. The hydrogel composition was determinant for the scaffold behavior: the HPC component was found to have a great influence on the BET and GAB areas, on the monolayer values estimated from sorption–desorption isotherms and on mucoadhesivity on small intestine mucosa, while the Pluronic F68 component improved the thermal stability. All blends were also found to have good mechanical strength and increased biocompatibility on the NHDF cell line. Based on their particular compositions and increased mucoadhesivity on small intestine mucosa, these polymeric blends could be effective in the repair or recovery of damaged cell membranes (due to the contribution of Pluronic F68) or in control drug-delivery intestinal formulations. MDPI 2022-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9407387/ /pubmed/36005120 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels8080519 Text en © 2022 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
Filip, Daniela
Macocinschi, Doina
Zaltariov, Mirela-Fernanda
Ciubotaru, Bianca-Iulia
Bargan, Alexandra
Varganici, Cristian-Dragos
Vasiliu, Ana-Lavinia
Peptanariu, Dragos
Balan-Porcarasu, Mihaela
Timofte-Zorila, Mihaela-Madalina
Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title_full Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title_fullStr Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title_full_unstemmed Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title_short Hydroxypropyl Cellulose/Pluronic-Based Composite Hydrogels as Biodegradable Mucoadhesive Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering
title_sort hydroxypropyl cellulose/pluronic-based composite hydrogels as biodegradable mucoadhesive scaffolds for tissue engineering
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9407387/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36005120
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels8080519
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