There is an increasing need to generate novel materials for the treatment and augmentation of bone defects, affecting millions of people worldwide. Fibrillar type I collagen is the most abundant tissue matrix protein in bone, providing its key native scaffolding material. However, while in vitro reconstituted collagen hydrogels of physically entangled, nano-fibred meshes, have long served as three-dimensional cultures, their highly-hydrated nature impacts their physiological relevance. In an effort to create biomimetic collagen gels, approaches have been undertaken to generate osteoid-like environments with increased collagen concentrations, controlled fibrillar orientation, defined micro-architectures, and tailored mechanical properties. This review describes the state-of-the-art on collagen densification techniques, exploring their advantages, limitations and future perspectives for applications as bone grafts. Ultimately, by successfully mimicking the organic milieu of bone through acellular or cell-mediated mineralisation of the designed osteoid-like structure, functional collagen scaffolds with potential applications in bone tissue engineering can be realised.
Recent convergence of the 3D printing of tissue‐like bioinks and regenerative medicine offers promise in the high‐throughput engineering of in vitro tissue models and organoids for drug screening and discovery research, and of potentially implantable neo‐tissues with tailored structural, biological, and mechanical properties. However, the current printing approaches are not compatible with collagen, the native scaffolding material. Herein, a unique biofabrication approach that uses automated gel aspiration‐ejection (GAE) is reported to potentially overcome these challenges. Automated‐GAE generates highly defined, aligned, dense collagen gel bioinks of various geometries (i.e., cylindrical, quadrangular, and tubular), dimensions, as well as tunable microstructural and mechanical properties that modulate seeded cellular responses. By densifying initial naturally derived reconstituted collagen hydrogels incorporating cells, automated‐GAE generates mini‐tissue building blocks with tailored protein fibril density and alignment, as well as cell loading, density and orientation according to the intended use. Surprisingly, a simple mathematical relationship defining the bioink compaction factor is found to be highly effective in predicting the initial and temporal properties of the bioinks in culture. Therefore, automated‐GAE will potentially also enable a fourth dimension to biofabrication, where cell–cell communications and cell‐extracellular matrix interactions as a function of time in culture can be predicted and modeled.
The incorporation of silk sericin into injectable dense collagen hydrogels represents a powerful approach to mimic the biomineralization process, together with the osteogenic stimulation of seeded mesenchymal stem cells, in vitro.
While silk fibroin (SF)-based fibrous matrices are often considered as templates to mimic the native biomineralization process, their limited ability to induce apatite deposition hinders their potential applications in bone tissue engineering. In this study, it was hypothesized that the incorporation of anionic fibroin derived polypeptides (Cs), generated through the α-chymotrypsin digestion of SF, into SF would induce apatite deposition. The effect of Cs incorporation and content on the mineralization of fibrous, electrospun (ES) SF matrices, was assessed in simulated body fluid (SBF). Moreover, the potential role of Cs in mediating the proliferation and osteoblastic differentiation of seeded mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), in vitro, was also investigated. Methylene blue staining indicated that the ES SF matrices became increasingly negatively charged with an increase in Cs content. Furthermore, the mechanical properties of the ES SF matrices were modulated through variations in Cs content. Their subsequent immersion in SBF demonstrated rapid mineralization, attributable to the carboxyl groups provided by the negatively charged Cs polypeptides, which served as nucleation sites for apatite deposition. Seeded MSCs attached on all scaffold types with differences observed in metabolic activities when cultured in osteogenic medium. Relative to basal medium, there was an upregulation of alkaline phosphatase, runt related transcription factor 2 and osteocalcin in osteogenic medium (at days 14 and 21). Cell-induced mineralized matrix deposition appeared to be accelerated on Cs incorporated ES SF suggesting an osteoinductive potential of these polypeptides. In sum, the ability to incorporate Cs into SF scaffolds offers promise in bone tissue engineering applications.
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