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1.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 16(34): 44605-44622, 2024 Aug 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39159061

ABSTRACT

Skeletal muscle tissue can be severely damaged by disease or trauma beyond its ability to self-repair, necessitating the further development of biofabrication and tissue-engineering tools for reconstructive processes. Hence, in this study, a composite bioink of oxidized alginate (ADA) and gelatin (GEL) including cell-laden ribbon-shaped fillers is used for enhancing cell alignment and the formation of an anisotropic structure. Different plasma treatments combined with protein coatings were evaluated for the improvement of cell adhesion to poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) ribbon surfaces. Oxygen plasma activation of 30 W for 5 min showed high immobilization of fibronectin as a protein coating on the PLGA ribbon surface, which resulted in enhanced cell adhesion and differentiation of muscle cells. Furthermore, the effect of various concentrations of CaCl2 solution, used for ionic cross-linking of ADA, on ADA-GEL physical and mechanical properties as well as encapsulated C2C12 cell viability and proliferation behavior was investigated. The pore area was measured via two approaches, cryofixation and lyophilization, which, in accordance with degradation tests and mechanical analysis, showed that 60 mM CaCl2 concentration is the optimum range for cross-linking of the formulation of ADA 2.5%w/v-GEL 3.75%w/v. These cross-linked hydrogels showed a compression modulus of 11.5 kPa (similar to the native skeletal muscle tissue), a high viability of C2C12 muscle cells (>80%), and a high proliferation rate during 7 days of culture. Rheological characterization of the ADA-GEL composite hydrogel containing short fillers (100 µm long) showed its suitability as a bioink with shear-thinning and flow behavior compared to ADA-GEL.


Subject(s)
Alginates , Gelatin , Hydrogels , Muscle, Skeletal , Tissue Engineering , Gelatin/chemistry , Alginates/chemistry , Animals , Mice , Hydrogels/chemistry , Hydrogels/pharmacology , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/cytology , Cell Line , Tissue Scaffolds/chemistry , Cell Survival/drug effects , Cell Proliferation/drug effects , Cell Adhesion/drug effects , Polylactic Acid-Polyglycolic Acid Copolymer/chemistry , Polylactic Acid-Polyglycolic Acid Copolymer/pharmacology , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/pharmacology
2.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 6587, 2022 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36329023

ABSTRACT

We employ alternating magnetic fields (AMF) to drive magnetic fillers actively and guide the formation and self-healing of percolation networks. Relying on AMF, we fabricate printable magnetoresistive sensors revealing an enhancement in sensitivity and figure of merit of more than one and two orders of magnitude relative to previous reports. These sensors display low noise, high resolution, and are readily processable using various printing techniques that can be applied to different substrates. The AMF-mediated self-healing has six characteristics: 100% performance recovery; repeatable healing over multiple cycles; room-temperature operation; healing in seconds; no need for manual reassembly; humidity insensitivity. It is found that the above advantages arise from the AMF-induced attraction of magnetic microparticles and the determinative oscillation that work synergistically to improve the quantity and quality of filler contacts. By virtue of these advantages, the AMF-mediated sensors are used in safety application, medical therapy, and human-machine interfaces for augmented reality.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Fields , Magnetics , Humans
3.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 43(19): e2200307, 2022 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35511792

ABSTRACT

Self-healing polymer-carbon composites are seen as promising materials for future electronic devices, which must be able to restore not only their structural integrity but also electrical performance after cracking and wear. Despite multiple reports about self-healing conductive elements, there is a lack of a broad fundamental understanding of correlation between viscoelasticity of such composites, their electrical properties, and self-healing of their mechanical as well as electrical properties. Here, it is reported thorough investigation of electromechanical properties of blends of carbon black (CB) as conductive filler and viscoelastic polymers (polydimethylsiloxanes (PDMS) and polyborosiloxane (PBS)) with different relaxation times as matrices. It is shown that behavior of composites depends strongly on the viscoelastic properties of polymers. Low molecular polymer composite possesses high conductivity due to strong filler network formation, quick electrical, and mechanical properties restoration, but for this the ability is sacrificed to flow and ductility at large deformation (material is brittle). In contrary, high relaxation time polymer composite behaves elastically on small time and flows at large time scale due to weak filler network and can heal. However, the electrical properties are worse than that of carbon and viscous polymer and degrade with time.

4.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(17): 20208-20219, 2022 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35438953

ABSTRACT

This paper reports for the first time the fabrication and investigation of wetting properties of structured surfaces formed by lamellae with an exceptionally high aspect ratio of up to 57:1 and more. The lamellar surfaces were fabricated using a polymer with tunable mechanical properties and shape-memory behavior. It was found that wetting properties of such structured surfaces depend on temperature, and thermal treatment history-structured surfaces are wetted easier at elevated temperature or after cooling to room temperature when the polymer is soft because of the easier deformability of lamellae. The shape of lamellae deformed by droplets can be temporarily fixed at low temperature and remains fixed upon heating to room temperature. Heating above the transition temperature of the shape-memory polymer restores the original shape. The high aspect ratio allows tuning of geometry not only manually, as it is done in most works reported previously but can also be made by a liquid droplet and is controlled by temperature. This behavior opens new opportunities for the design of novel smart elements for microfluidic devices such as smart valves, whose state and behavior can be switched by thermal stimuli: valves that can or cannot be opened that are able to close or can be fixed in an open or closed states.

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