Stem cells microencapsulated in hydrogel as stem cell-hydrogel constructs have wide applications in the burgeoning cell-based medicine. Due to their short shelf life at ambient temperature, long-term storage or banking of the constructs is essential to the "off-the-shelf" ready availability needed for their widespread applications. As a high-efficiency, easy-to-operate, low-toxicity, and low-cost method for long-term storage of the constructs, low-cryoprotectant (CPA) vitrification has attracted tremendous attention recently. However, we found many cells in the stem cell-alginate constructs (∼500 μm in diameter) could not attach to the substrate post low-CPA vitrification with ∼2 M penetrating CPAs. To address this problem, we introduced nanowarming via magnetic induction heating (MIH) of FeO nanoparticles to minimize recrystallization and devitrification during the warming step of the low-CPA vitrification procedure. Our results indicate that high-quality stem cell-alginate hydrogel constructs with an intact microstructure, high immediate cell survival (>80%), and greatly improved attachment efficiency (by nearly three times, 68% versus 24%) of the encapsulated cells could be obtained post-cryopreservation with nanowarming. Moreover, the cells encapsulated in the cell-hydrogel constructs post-cryopreservation maintained normal proliferation under 3D culture and retained intact biological function of multilineage differentiation. This novel low-CPA vitrification approach for cell cryopreservation enabled by the combined use of alginate hydrogel microencapsulation and FeO nanoparticles-mediated nanowarming may be valuable in facilitating the widespread application of stem cells in the clinic.
Two-dimensional (2D) graphene oxide (GO) and molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) nanosheets (NSs) have been widely used as photothermal agents and as potential carriers of antitumor drugs. Their spatial thermal effects have been extensively explored for use at physiological and hyperthermic temperatures (37 to 46 °C). Furthermore, the modulation of the spatial thermal distributions with these NSs may have even more profound applications in the microstructural control of biomaterials at cryogenic temperatures (-196 to 37 °C). These applications include bioinspired microfabrication via freezing, food and drug freeze-drying, and biomaterial cryopreservation. However, such thermal effects of NSs and their applications at cryogenic temperatures had never been fully explored. Therefore, in this study, we have utilized the near-infrared laser induced photothermal effects of GO and MoS2 NSs to suppress the ice nucleation and ice crystal growth during warming of the biosamples. Using this approach, biological cells subjected to fast cooling to a deeply frozen state (-196 °C) were successfully recovered with high survival rates and full biological functionality. Thus, we provide a NS based effective approach to control the crystallization behaviors of water during warming at cryogenic temperatures, as NSs may have wide applications in both materials science and bioengineering.
In the past few decades, the self‐healing surface materials with durable mechanical, functional, and structural properties have attracted enormous research interests, which exhibit great potential in energy conversion devices, sensors, electronic skins, superhydrophobic fabrics, medical/biological hydrogel, and a protective coating. Despite the remarkable progresses achieved in the self‐healing surface, the systematic and overall reviews that focus on self‐healing surface materials are still lacking and in urgent need. Herein, the recent advances in the development of self‐healing surface materials are summarized. The surface damage forms that composed of cracks, scratches, punctures, and surface wear, are systematically reviewed. The self‐healing mechanism and methods at interface are then introduced to briefly explain the basic design principle. The recent developments of functional surfaces including superhydrophobic, oleophobic, antifogging, anti‐icing, antibiofouling, and anticorrosion surfaces with self‐healing functions are further discussed. Finally, the contemporary challenges, and the future perspectives that motivate are proposed to create more innovative self‐healing materials for diverse fields.
Injectable stem cell-hydrogel constructs hold great potential for regenerative medicine and cell-based therapies. However, their clinical application is still challenging due to their short shelf-life at ambient temperature and the time-consuming fabrication procedure. Banking the constructs at cryogenic temperature may offer the possibility of “off-the-shelf” availability to end-users. However, ice formation during the cryopreservation process may compromise the construct quality and cell viability. Vitrification, cooling biological samples without apparent ice formation, has been explored to resolve the challenge. However, contemporary vitrification methods are limited to very small volume (up to ~0.25 ml) and/or need highly toxic and high concentration (up to ~8 M) of permeable cryoprotectants (pCPAs). Here, we show that polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE, best known as Teflon for making non-stick cookware) capillary is flexible and unusually stable at a cryogenic temperature. By using the PTFE capillary as a flexible cryopreservation vessel together with alginate hydrogel microencapsulation and Fe3O4 nanoparticle-mediated nanowarming to suppress ice formation, massive-volume (10 ml) vitrification of cell-alginate hydrogel constructs with a low concentration (~2.5 M) of pCPA can be achieved. This may greatly facilitate the use of stem cell-based constructs for tissue regeneration and cell based therapies in the clinic.
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