Gelatin is one of the most commonly used biopolymer for creating cellular scaffolds due to its innocuous nature. To create stable gelatin scaffolds at physiological temperature (37 degrees C), chemical cross-linking is a necessary step. In a previous paper (Biomacromolecules 2006, 7, 3059-3068), cross-linking was carried out by either radical polymerization of the methacrylated derivative of gelatin (GMA) or through the formation of isopeptide bonds catalyzed by transglutaminase. The method of scaffold production was based on emulsion templating in which an organic phase is dispersed in the form of discrete droplets into a continuous aqueous solution of the biopolymer. Both kinds of scaffolds were tested as culture medium for hepatocytes. It turned out that the enzymatic cross-linked scaffold performed superiorily in this respect, even though it was mechanically less stable than the GMA scaffold. In the present paper, in an attempt to improve the biocompatibility of the GMA-based scaffold, biopolymers present in the extracellular matrix (ECM) were included in scaffold formulation, namely, chondroitin sulfate and hyaluronic acid. These biopolymers were derivatized with methacrylic moieties to undergo radical polymerization together with GMA. The morphology of the scaffolds was tuned to some extent by varying the volume fraction of the internal phase and to a larger extent by inducing a controlled destabilization of the precursor emulsion through the use of additives. In this way, scaffolds with 44% of the void volume attributable to voids with a diameter exceeding 60 microm and with 79% of the interconnect area attributable to interconnects with a diameter exceeding 20 microm in diameter could be successfully synthesized. To test whether the inclusion of ECM components into scaffold formulation resolves in an improvement of their biocompatibility with respect to GMA scaffolds, hepatocytes were seeded on both kinds of scaffolds and cell viability and function assays were carried out and compared.
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