Photocurable gelatin-based hydrogels have established themselves as powerful bioinks in tissue engineering due to their excellent biocompatibility, biodegradability, light responsiveness, thermosensitivity and bioprinting properties. While gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) has been the gold standard for many years, thiol-ene hydrogel systems based on norbornene-functionalized gelatin (GelNB) and a thiolated crosslinker have recently gained increasing importance. In this paper, a highly reproducible water-based synthesis of GelNB is presented, avoiding the use of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) as organic solvent and covering a broad range of degrees of functionalization (DoF: 20% to 97%). Mixing with thiolated gelatin (GelS) results in the superfast curing photoclick hydrogel GelNB/GelS. Its superior properties over GelMA, such as substantially reduced amounts of photoinitiator (0.03% (w/v)), superfast curing (1-2 s), higher network homogeneity, post-polymerization functionalization ability, minimal cross-reactivity with cellular components, and improved biocompatibility of hydrogel precursors and degradation products lead to increased survival of primary cells in 3D bioprinting. Post-printing viability analysis revealed excellent survival rates of > 84% for GelNB/GelS bioinks of varying crosslinking density, while cell survival for GelMA bioinks is strongly dependent on the DoF. Hence, the semisynthetic and easily accessible GelNB/GelS hydrogel is a highly promising bioink for future medical applications and other light-based biofabrication techniques.
Introduction: Three-dimensional bioprinting can be considered as an advancement of the classical tissue engineering concept. For bioprinting, cells have to be dispersed in hydrogels. Recently, a novel semi-synthetic thiolene hydrogel system based on norbornene-functionalized gelatin (GelNB) and thiolated gelatin (GelS) was described that resulted in the photoclick hydrogel GelNB/GelS. In this study, we evaluated the printability and biocompatibility of this hydrogel system towards adipose-tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ASCs). Methods: GelNB/GelS was synthesized with three different crosslinking densities (low, medium and high), resulting in different mechanical properties with moduli of elasticity between 206 Pa and 1383 Pa. These hydrogels were tested for their biocompatibility towards ASCs in terms of their viability, proliferation and differentiation. The extrusion-based bioprinting of ASCs in GelNB/GelS-high was performed to manufacture three-dimensional cubic constructs. Results: All three hydrogels supported the viability, proliferation and chondrogenic differentiation of ASCs to a similar extent. The adipogenic differentiation of ASCs was better supported by the softer hydrogel (GelNB/GelS-low), whereas the osteogenic differentiation was more pronounced in the harder hydrogel (GelNB/GelS-high), indicating that the differentiation fate of ASCs can be influenced via the adaption of the mechanical properties of the GelNB/GelS system. After the ex vivo chondrogenic differentiation and subcutaneous implantation of the bioprinted construct into immunocompromised mice, the production of negatively charged sulfated proteoglycans could be observed with only minimal inflammatory signs in the implanted material. Conclusions: Our results indicate that the GelNB/GelS hydrogels are very well suited for the bioprinting of ASCs and may represent attractive hydrogels for subsequent in vivo tissue engineering applications.
We demonstrate the utility of block polyelectrolyte (bPE) additives to enhance viscosity and resolve longstanding challenges with the three-dimensional printability of extrusion-based biopolymer inks. The addition of oppositely charged bPEs into solutions of photocurable gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) results in complexation-driven self- assembly of the bPEs, leading to GelMA/bPE inks that are printable at physiological temperatures, representing stark improvements over GelMA inks that suffer from low viscosity at 37 °C leading to low printability and poor structural stability. The hierarchical microstructure of the self-assemblies (either jammed micelles or three-dimensional networks) formed by the oppositely charged bPEs, as confirmed by small angle X-ray scattering, is attributed to the enhancements in the shear strength and printability of the GelMA/bPE inks. Varying bPE concentration in the inks is shown to enable tunability of the rheological properties to meet the criteria of pre- and post-extrusion flow characteristics for 3D bioprinting, including prominent yield stress behavior, strong shear thinning, and rapid recovery upon flow cessation. Moreover, the bPE self-assemblies also contribute to the robustness of the photocrosslinked hydrogels – photocrosslinked GelMA/bPE hydrogels are shown to exhibit higher shear strength than photocrosslinked GelMA hydrogels. We envision this study to serve as a practical guide for the bioprinting of bespoke extrusion inks where bPE are used as scaffolds and viscosity enhancers that can be emulated in a range of biopolymers and photocurable precursors.
We demonstrate the utility of block polyelectrolyte (bPE) additives to enhance viscosity and resolve longstanding challenges with the three-dimensional printability of extrusion-based biopolymer inks. The addition of oppositely charged bPEs into solutions of photocurable gelatin methacryloyl (GelMA) results in complexation-driven self- assembly of the bPEs, leading to GelMA/bPE inks that are printable at physiological temperatures, representing stark improvements over GelMA inks that suffer from low viscosity at 37 °C leading to low printability and poor structural stability. The hierarchical microstructure of the self-assemblies (either jammed micelles or three-dimensional networks) formed by the oppositely charged bPEs, as confirmed by small angle X-ray scattering, is attributed to the enhancements in the shear strength and printability of the GelMA/bPE inks. Varying bPE concentration in the inks is shown to enable tunability of the rheological properties to meet the criteria of pre- and post-extrusion flow characteristics for 3D bioprinting, including prominent yield stress behavior, strong shear thinning, and rapid recovery upon flow cessation. Moreover, the bPE self-assemblies also contribute to the robustness of the photocrosslinked hydrogels – photocrosslinked GelMA/bPE hydrogels are shown to exhibit higher shear strength than photocrosslinked GelMA hydrogels. We envision this study to serve as a practical guide for the bioprinting of bespoke extrusion inks where bPE are used as scaffolds and viscosity enhancers that can be emulated in a range of biopolymers and photocurable precursors.
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