Creation of Grooved Tissue Engineering Scaffolds from Architectured Multilayer Polymer Composites by a Tuneable One‐Step Degradation Process
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Résumé
The surface properties of biomaterials interact directly with biological systems, influencing cellular responses, tissue integration, and biocompatibility. Surface topography plays a critical role in cardiac tissue engineering by affecting electrical conductivity, cardiomyocyte alignment, and contractile function. Current methods for controlling surface properties and topography in cardiac tissue engineering scaffolds are limited, expensive, and lack precision. This study introduces a low‐cost, one‐step degradation process to create scaffolds with well‐defined micro‐grooves from multilayered 3D printed poly(lactic acid)/thermoplastic polyurethane composites. The approach provides control over erosion rate and surface morphology, allowing easy tuning of scaffold topographical cues for tissue engineering applications. The findings reported in this study provide a library of easily tuneable scaffold topographical cues. A strong dependence of neonatal rat cardiomyocyte (NRCM) contact guidance with the multilayers' dimension and shape in partially degraded polylactic acid (PLA)/thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) samples is observed. NRCMs cultured on samples with a layer thickness of 13 ± 2 µm and depth of 4.7 ± 0.2 µm demonstrate the most regular contractions. Hence, the proposed fabrication scheme can be used to produce a new generation of biomaterials with excellent controllability determined by multilayer thickness, printing parameters, and degradation treatment duration.
Fichier(s) constituant cette publication
Cette publication figure dans le(s) laboratoire(s) suivant(s)
Documents liés
Visualiser des documents liés par titre, auteur, créateur et sujet.
-
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
VELLAYAPPAN, Muthu Vignesh; DUARTE, Francisco;
SOLLOGOUB, Cyrille;
DIRRENBERGER, Justin;
ALAIN, Guinault; FRITH, Jessica E.; PARKINGTON, Helena C.; MOLOTNIKOV, Andrey;
CAMERON, Neil (Wiley, 2023-04-17)
Tissue engineering benefits from advances in 3D printing and multi‐material assembly to attain certain functional benefits over existing man‐made materials. Multilayered tissue engineering constructs might unlock a unique ... -
Computational Investigation of the Effective Mechanical Behavior for 3D Pre-Buckled Auxetic Lattices Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
ALBERTINI, Frédéric; DIRRENBERGER, Justin; MOLOTNIKOV, Andrey; SOLLOGOUB, Cyrille (American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019)
Negative Poisson’s ratio materials, or auxetics, have drawn attention for the past 30 years. The auxetic effect could lead to improved mechanical properties such as acoustic damping, indentation resistance, or crashworthiness. ... -
Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
ALBERTINI, Frédéric; DIRRENBERGER, Justin; SOLLOGOUB, Cyrille; MACONACHIE, Tobias; LEARY, Martin; MOLOTNIKOV, Andrey (Elsevier BV, 2021-09-25)
In this work, the influence of a compliant hyperelastic polymeric phase infiltrated inside stiff auxetic lattices is studied through experimental and numerical approaches. Samples were fabricated using material jetting ... -
Article dans une revue avec comité de lectureBIRONEAU, Adrien; DIRRENBERGER, Justin; SOLLOGOUB, Cyrille; MIQUELARD-GARNIER, Guillaume;
ROLAND, Sébastien (Wiley, 2016)
The size of representative microstructural samples obtained from atomic force microscopy is addressed in this paper. The case of an archetypal one-dimensional nanolayered polymer blend is considered. Image analysis is ... -
Chapitre d'ouvrage scientifiqueGAUDILLIÈRE, Nadja; DIRRENBERGER, Justin; BAVEREL, Olivier; SOLLOGOUB, Cyrille (RVTR Design Research Group, 2015)This project results from the collaboration of architects, structural and material scientists. It consists in a multidisciplinary, collective design method, based on the deep relations between material selection, process ...